YIELD IMPROVEMENT IN PLANTS

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20160333369
  • Publication Number
    20160333369
  • Date Filed
    October 13, 2014
    9 years ago
  • Date Published
    November 17, 2016
    7 years ago
Abstract
Polynucleotides and polypeptides incorporated into expression vectors are introduced into plants and were ectopically expressed. These polypeptides may confer at least one regulatory activity and increased yield, increased light use efficiency, increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency, greater vigor, and/or greater biomass as compared to a control plant.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to plant genomics and plant improvement.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A plant's phenotypic characteristics that enhance photosynthetic resource use efficiency may be controlled through a number of cellular processes. One important way to manipulate that control is by manipulating the characteristics or expression of regulatory proteins, proteins that influence the expression of a particular gene or sets of genes. For example, transformed or transgenic plants that comprise cells with altered levels of at least one selected regulatory polypeptide may possess advantageous or desirable traits, and strategies for manipulating traits by altering a plant cell's regulatory polypeptide content or expression level can result in plants and crops with commercially valuable properties. Examples of such trait manipulation include:


Increasing Canopy Photosynthesis to Increase Crop Yield.


Recent studies by crop physiologists have provided evidence that crop-canopy photosynthesis is correlated with crop yield, and that increasing canopy photosynthesis can increase crop yield (Long et al., 2006. Plant Cell Environ. 29:315-33; Murchie et al., 2009 New Phytol. 181:532-552; Zhu et al., 2010. Ann. Rev. Plant Biol. 61:235-261). Two overlapping strategies for increasing canopy photosynthesis have been proposed. The first recognizes great potential to increase canopy photosynthesis by improving multiple discrete reactions that currently limit photosynthetic capacity (reviewed in Zhu et al., 2010. supra). The second focuses upon improving plant physiological status during environmental conditions that limit the realization of photosynthetic capacity. It is important to distinguish this second goal from recent industry and academic screening for genes to improve stress tolerance. Arguably, these efforts may have identified genes that improve plant physiological status during severe stresses not typically experienced on productive acres (Jones, 2007. J. Exp. Bot. 58:119-130; Passioura, 2007. J. Exp. Bot. 58:113-117). In contrast, improving the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to the availability of key resources of water, nitrogen and light, is thought to be more appropriate for improving yield on productive acres (Long et al., 1994. Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Molec. Biol. 45:633-662; Morison et al., 2008. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 363:639-658; Passioura, 2007, supra).


Increasing Nitrogen Use Efficiency (NUE) to Increase Crop Yield.


There has been a large increase in food productivity over the past 50 years causing a decrease in world hunger despite a significant increase in population (Godfray et al., 2010. Science 327:812-818). A significant contribution to this increased yield was a 20-fold increase in the application of nitrogen fertilizers (Glass, 2003. Crit. Rev. Plant Sci. 22:453-470). About 85 million to 90 million metric tons of nitrogen are applied annually to soil, and this application rate is expected to increase to 240 million metric tons by 2050 (Good et al., 2004. Trends Plant Sci. 9:597-605). However, plants use only 30 to 40% of the applied nitrogen and the rest is lost through a combination of leaching, surface run-off, denitrification, volatilization, and microbial consumption (Frink et al., 1999. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96:1175-1180; Glass, 2003, supra; Good et al., 2004, supra; Raun and Johnson, 1999. Agron. J. 91:357-363). The loss of more than 60% of applied nitrogen can have serious environmental effects, such as groundwater contamination, anoxic coastal zones, and conversion to greenhouse gases. In addition, while most fertilizer components are mined (such as phosphates), inorganic nitrogen is derived from the energy intensive conversion of gaseous nitrogen to ammonia. Thus, the addition of nitrogen fertilizer is typically the highest single input cost for many crops, and since its production is energy intensive, the cost is dependent on the price of energy (Rothstein, 2007. Plant Cell 19:2695-2699). With an increasing demand for food from an increasing human population, agriculture yields must be increased at the same time as dependence on applied fertilizers is decreased. Therefore, to minimize nitrogen loss, reduce environmental pollution, and decrease input cost, it is crucial to develop crop varieties with higher nitrogen use efficiency (Garnett et al., 2009. Plant Cell Environ. 32:1272-1283; Hirel et al., 2007. J. Exp. Bot. 58:2369-2387; Lea and Azevedo, 2007. Ann. Appl. Biol. 151:269-275; Masclaux-Daubresse et al., 2010. Ann. Bot. 105:1141-1157; Moll et al., 1982. Agron. J. 74:562-564; Sylvester-Bradley and Kindred, 2009. J. Exp. Bot. 60:1939-1951).


Improving Water Use Efficiency (WUE) to Improve Yield.


Freshwater is a limited and dwindling global resource; therefore, improving the efficiency with which food and biofuel crops use water is a prerequisite for maintaining and improving yield (Karaba et al., 2007. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 104:15270-15275). WUE can be used to describe the relationship between water use and crop productivity over a range of time integrals. The basic physiological definition of WUE equates the ratio of photosynthesis (A) to transpiration (T) at a given moment in time, also referred to as transpiration efficiency. However, the WUE concept can be scaled significantly, for example, over the complete lifecycle of a crop, where biomass or yield can be expressed per cumulative total of water transpired from the canopy. Thus far, the engineering of major field crops for improved WUE with single genes has not yet been achieved (Karaba et al., 2007. supra). Regardless, increased yields of wheat cultivars bred for increased transpiration efficiency (the ratio of photosynthesis to transpiration) have provided important support for the proposition that crop yield can be increased over broad acres through improvement in crop water-use efficiency (Condon et al., 2004. J. Exp. Bot. 55:2447-2460).


Estimates of water-use efficiency integrated over the life of plant tissues can be derived from analysis of the ratio of the 13C carbon isotope to the 12C carbon isotope in those tissues. The theory that underlies this means to estimating WUE is that during photosynthesis, incorporation of 13C into the products of photosynthesis is slower than the lighter isotope 12C. Effectively, 13C is discriminated against relative to 12C during photosynthesis, an effect that is integrated over the life of the plant resulting in biomass with a distinct 13C/12C signature. Of the many steps in the photosynthetic process during which this discrimination occurs, discrimination at the active site of Rubisco is of most significance, a consequence of kinetic constraints associated with the 13CO2 molecule being larger. Significantly, the discrimination by Rubisco is not constant, but varies depending on the CO2 concentration within the leaf. At high CO2 concentration discrimination by Rubisco is highest, however as CO2 concentration decreases discrimination decreases. Because the CO2 concentration within the leaf is overwhelmingly dependent on the balance between CO2 influx through the stomatal pore and the rate of photosynthesis, and because the stomatal pore controls the rate of transpiration from the leaf, the 13C/12C isotopic signature of plant material provides an integrated record of the balance between transpiration and photosynthesis during the life of the plant and as such a surrogate measure of water-use efficiency (Farquhar et al. 1989. Annu. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 40:503-537).


With these needs in mind, new technologies for yield enhancement are required. In this disclosure, a phenotypic screening platform that directly measures photosynthetic capacity, water use efficiency, and nitrogen use efficiency of mature plants was used to discover advantageous properties conferred by ectopic expression of the described regulatory proteins in plants.


SUMMARY

The instant description is directed to a transgenic plant or plants that have increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency with respect to a control plant, or a plant part derived from such a plant, e.g., shoot vegetative organs/structures (e.g., leaves, stems and tubers), roots, flowers and floral organs/structures (e.g., bracts, sepals, petals, stamens, carpels, anthers and ovules), seed (including embryo, endosperm, and seed coat) and fruit (the mature ovary), plant tissue (e.g., vascular tissue, ground tissue, and the like), pulped, pureed, ground-up, macerated or broken-up tissue, and cells (e.g., guard cells, egg cells, etc.)). In this regard, the transgenic plant or plants comprise a recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter of interest. The choice of promoter may include a constitutive promoter or a promoter with enhanced activity in a tissue capable of photosynthesis (also referred to herein as a “photosynthetic promoter” or a “photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter”) such as a leaf tissue or other green tissue. Examples of photosynthetic promoters include for example, an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter or others such as the At4g01060 (also referred to as “G682”) promoter, the latter regulating expression in a guard cell. The promoter regulates a polypeptide that is encoded by the recombinant polynucleotide or by a second (or target) recombinant polynucleotide (in which case expression of the polypeptide may be regulated by a trans-regulatory element). The promoter may also regulate expression of a polypeptide to an effective level of expression in a photosynthetic tissue, that is, to a level that, as a result of expression of the polypeptide to that level, improves photosynthetic resource use efficiency in a transgenic plant relative to a control plant. The recombinant polynucleotide may comprise the promoter and also encode the polypeptide or alternatively, the polynucleotide may comprise the promoter and drive expression of the polypeptide that is encoded by the second recombinant polynucleotide. In an exemplary embodiment, the polypeptide comprises a sequence listed in the sequence listing, or a sequence that is homologous, paralogous or orthologous to said polypeptide, being structurally-related to said polypeptide and having a function similar to said polypeptide as described herein. Expression of the polypeptide under the regulatory control of the constitutive or leaf-enhanced or photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter in the transgenic plant confers greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency to the transgenic plants, and may ultimately increase yield that may be obtained from the plants.


The instant description also pertains to methods for increasing photosynthetic resource use efficiency in, or increasing yield from, a plant or plants including the method conducted by growing a transgenic plant comprising and/or transformed with an expression cassette comprising the recombinant polynucleotide that comprises a constitutive promoter or a promoter expressed in photosynthetic tissue, which may be a leaf-enhanced or green tissue-enhanced promoter, such as for example, the RBCS3, RBCS4, At4g01060, or another photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter. Examples of photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoters are found in the Sequence Listing or in Table 22. The promoter regulates expression of a polypeptide that comprises a polypeptide listed in the Sequence Listing. Recombinant polynucleotides encoding these clade polypeptides are described in the following paragraphs (a)-(c), and exemplary polypeptides within the clade are described in the following paragraphs (d)-(f) and are shown in the instant sequence alignments and Figures.


The recombinant polynucleotide that is introduced into a transgenic plant may encode a listed polypeptide sequence or encodes a polypeptide that is phylogenetically-related to a listed polypeptide sequence, including sequences that include:


(a) nucleic acid sequences that are at least 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to any of the listed polypeptides; and/or


(b) nucleic acid sequences that encode polypeptide sequences that are at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical in their amino acid sequences to the entire length to any of the listed polypeptides; and/or


(c) nucleic acid sequences that hybridize under stringent conditions (e.g., hybridization followed by one, by two, or by more than two wash steps of 6× saline-sodium citrate buffer (SSC) and 65° C. for ten to thirty minutes per step) to any of the listed polynucleotides.


The listed polypeptides and polypeptides member of their protein clade may include:


(d) polypeptide sequences encoded by the nucleic acid sequences of (a), (b) and/or (c); and/or


(e) polypeptide sequences that have at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65f %, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to any of the listed polypeptides, including SEQ ID NO: 2n, where n=1 to 241 (i.e., even integers 2, 4, 6, 8, . . . 482);


and/or at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65f %, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100 amino acid identity to a conserved domain of any of the listed polypeptides, including SEQ ID NO: 483 to 841; and/or


(f) polypeptide sequences that comprise a subsequence that are at least 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to any of the consensus sequences provided in the Sequence Listing, including SEQ ID NO: 842 to 861.


Expression of these polypeptides in the transgenic plant may confer increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to a control plant. The transgenic plant may be selected for increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency or greater yield relative to the control plant. The transgenic plant may also be crossed with itself, a second plant from the same line as the transgenic plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed.


The instant description also pertains to methods for producing and selecting a crop plant with a greater yield than a control plant, the method comprising producing a transgenic plant by introducing into a target plant a recombinant polynucleotide that comprises a promoter, such as a leaf- or photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter that regulates a polypeptide encoded by the recombinant polynucleotide or a second recombinant polynucleotide, wherein the polypeptide comprises a polypeptide listed in the Sequence Listing, or a member of a clades of polypeptides phylogenetically related to a polypeptide listed in the Sequence Listing. A plurality of the transgenic plants is then grown, and a transgenic plant is selected that produces greater yield or has greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than a control plant. The expression of the polypeptide in the selected transgenic plant confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency and/or greater yield relative to the control plant. Optionally, the selected transgenic plant may be crossed with itself, a second plant from the same line as the transgenic plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed. A plurality of the selected transgenic plants will generally have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of an identical number of the control plants.


The transgenic plant(s) described herein and produced by the instantly described methods may also possess one or more altered traits that result in greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency. The altered trait may include: increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, a decrease in leaf chlorophyll content, a decrease in percentage of nitrogen in leaf dry weight, increased leaf transpiration efficiency, an increase in resistance to water vapor diffusion from the leaf exerted by stomata, an increased rate of relaxation of photoprotective reactions operating in the light harvesting antennae, a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C in above-ground biomass, and/or an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material.


At least one advantage of greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency is that the transgenic plant, or a plurality of the transgenic plants, will have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of an identical number of the control plants, or produce greater yield than an identical number of the control plants. A wide variety of transgenic plants are envisioned, including corn, wheat, rice, Setaria, Miscanthus, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum, turfgrass, soy, cotton, canola, rapeseed, Crambe, Camelina, sugar beet, alfalfa, tomato, Eucalyptus, poplar, willow, pine, birch and other woody plants.


The instant description also pertains to expression vectors that comprise a recombinant polynucleotide that comprises a promoter expressed in photosynthetic tissue, for example, a constitutive promoter, or a leaf- or green tissue-enhanced promoter including the RBCS3, RBCS4, or At4g01060 promoters, or another photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter, for example, such a promoter found in the Sequence Listing or in Table 22, and a subsequence that encodes a polypeptide comprising a polypeptide sequence provided in the Sequence Listing or a member of the polypeptide clades of the polypeptide sequences listed in the Sequence Listing, or, alternatively, two expression constructs, one of which encodes a promoter such as a constitutive promoter, or a leaf-enhanced promoter or other photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter, and the second encodes a polypeptide sequence provided in the Sequence Listing or a member of the polypeptide clades of the polypeptide sequences listed in the Sequence Listing. In either instance, whether the polypeptide is encoded by the first or second expression constructs, the promoter regulates expression of the polypeptide by being responsible for production of cis- or trans-regulatory elements, respectively. In some embodiments, the expression vectors or cassettes comprise a promoter of the present application, and a gene of interest, wherein the promoter and the gene of interest do not link to each other under natural conditions, e.g., the linkage between the promoter and the gene of interest does not exist in nature.


The instant description is also directed to a method for producing a monocot plant with increased grain yield by providing a monocot plant cell or plant tissue with stably integrated, exogenous, recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter (for example, a constitutive, a non-constitutive, an inducible, a tissue-enhanced, or a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter) that is functional in plant cells and that is operably linked to an exogenous or an endogenous nucleic acid sequence that encodes a listed polypeptide, that is expressed in a photosynthetic tissue of the transgenic plant to a level effective in conferring greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to a control plant that does not contain the recombinant polynucleotide. A plant is generated from the plant cell or the plant tissue that comprises the recombinant polynucleotide, the plant is then grown and an increase in photosynthetic resource use efficiency or grain yield is measured relative to the control plant.


In the above paragraphs, the control plant may be exemplified by a plant of the same species as the plant comprising the recombinant polynucleotide, but the control plant does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide that encodes a listed polypeptide of interest.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEQUENCE LISTING AND DRAWINGS

The Sequence Listing provides exemplary polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences of the instant description. The traits associated with the use of the sequences are included in the Examples.


Incorporation of the Sequence Listing

The Sequence Listing provides exemplary polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences. The copy of the Sequence Listing being submitted electronically with this patent application under 37 CFR §1.821-1.825, is a read-only memory computer-readable file in ASCII text format. The Sequence Listing is named “MPS-0216P_ST25.txt”, the electronic file of the Sequence Listing was created on Oct. 2, 2013, and is (1,651,577 bytes in size (157 megabytes in size as measured in MS-WINDOWS). The Sequence Listing is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.


In FIG. 1, a phylogenetic tree of ATMYB27 or AT3G53200 (also referred to as G1311) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. ATMYB27 (AT3G53200.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of ATMYB27 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 1. ATMYB27 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by AT3G53200.1 and GSVIVT01033670001_VITVI.



FIGS. 2A-2D show an alignment of ATMYB27 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved first and second Myb domains appear in boxes in FIGS. 2A-2B and FIG. 2B, respectively (for which the consensus sequences are SEQ ID NOs842 and 843).



FIG. 3: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in three ATMYB27 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci over which the activity of Rubisco is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least six replicate plants for each line.


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◯ Line 6 FIG. 4: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in four ATMYB27 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci over which the capacity to regenerate RuBP is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least six replicate plants for each line.


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In FIGS. 5A and 5B, a phylogenetic tree of RPB45A or AT5G54900 (also referred to as G1940) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. RPB45A (AT5G54900.1) appears in the rounded rectangle in FIG. 5B. An ancestral sequence of RPB45A and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 5B. RPB45A clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi5g22410.1_BRADI and SolycO3g031720.2.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 6A-6AF show an alignment of RPB45A and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved first, second, and third RNA Recognition Motif (RRM) domains appear in boxes in FIGS. 6I-6N, FIGS. 6M-6R, and 6S-6X, respectively (for which the consensus sequences are SEQ ID NOs 844, 845 and 846, respectively).


In FIG. 7, a phylogenetic tree of TCP6 or AT5G41030 (also referred to as G1936) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. TCP6 (AT5G41030.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of TCP6 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 7. TCP6 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi2g59240.1_BRADI and Solyc02g094290.1.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 8A-8L show an alignment of TCP6 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved TCP domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 8C-8E (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 847).


In FIG. 9, a phylogenetic tree of PIL1 or AT2G46970 (also referred to as G1649) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. The PIL1 clade members appear in the large box with the solid line boundary. PIL1 (AT2G46970.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of PIL1 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 9. PIL1 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by AT2G46970.1_ARATH and POPTR_0014 s10700.1_POPTR.



FIGS. 10A-10F show an alignment of PIL1 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved bHLH domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 10D-10E (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 848).


In FIG. 11, a phylogenetic tree of PCL1 or AT3G46640 (also referred to as G2741) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. PCL1 (AT3G46640.3) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of PCL1 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 11. PCL1 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi2g62067.1_BRADI and GSVIVT01024916001_VITVI.



FIGS. 12A-12N show an alignment of PCL1 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved SANT (aka Myb-related or GARP) domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 12H-12I (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 849).



FIG. 13: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in four PCL1 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci where the activity of Rubisco is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least seven replicate plants for each line.


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In FIG. 14, a phylogenetic tree of GTL1 or AT1G33240 (also referred to as G634) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. GTL1 (AT1G33240.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of GTL1 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 14. GTL1 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi5g17150.1_BRADI and POPTR_0005 s21420.1_POPTR.



FIGS. 15A-15X show an alignment of GTL1 and representative clade-related proteins. The sequence denoted G634_P77591 was the splice variant of GTL1 that was expressed in plants. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved first and second trihelix (aka GT or Myb/SANT-related) domains appear in boxes in FIGS. 15C-15E and FIGS. 150-15Q, respectively (for which the consensus sequences are SEQ ID NOs 850 and 851).


In FIG. 16, a phylogenetic tree of DREB2H or AT2G40350 (also referred to as G1755) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. DREB2H (AT2G40350.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of DREB2H and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 16. DREB2H clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi2g04000.1_BRADI and Solyc06g050520.1.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 17A-17N show an alignment of DREB2H and representative clade-related proteins. The sequence denoted G1755_P4407 was the sequence of the DREB2H clone expressed in plants. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved AP2 domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 17E-17F (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 852).


In FIG. 18, a phylogenetic tree of ERF087 or AT1G28160 (also referred to as G2292) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. ERF087 (AT1G28160.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of ERF087 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 18. ERF087 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi3g44470.1_BRADI and Glyma16g05070.1_GLYMA.



FIGS. 19A-19J show an alignment of ERF087 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved AP2 domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 19C-19D, respectively (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 853).



FIG. 20: Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) dynamics at 22° C. Plot showing decreased NPQ in multiple ERF087 overexpression lines, during short term acclimation to high light. NPQ was calculated from an initial measurement of maximal, dark adapted fluorescence (Fm) and subsequent measurements of fluorescence made under varying incident light (Fm), as NPQ=(Fm/F′m)−1. During the nine minute assay F′m was measured at 30 second intervals: initially after exposure to 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 beginning immediately after Fm was measured; then, after a decrease to 0 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 after 3 minutes; then, after an increase to 2000 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 after 4 minutes. All symbols are the mean±1 standard error of measurements made on at least five replicate leaves for a given line (TAR′ refers to photosynthetically active radiation).


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FIG. 21: Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) dynamics at 35° C. Plot showing decreased NPQ in multiple ERF087 overexpression lines, during short term acclimation to high light. NPQ was calculated from an initial measurement of maximal, dark adapted fluorescence (Fm) and subsequent measurements of fluorescence made under varying incident light (F′m), as NPQ=(Fm/F′m)−1. During the nine minute assay F′m was measured at 30 second intervals: initially after exposure to 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 beginning immediately after Fm was measured; then, after a decrease to 0 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 after 3 minutes; then, after an increase to 2000 μmol PAR m−2 s−1 after 4 minutes. All symbols are the mean±1 standard error of measurements made on at least five replicate leaves for a given line.


Legend for FIG. 21:



custom-character Control


□ Line 1


⋄ Line 2


× Line 3


◯ Line 4


Δ Line 5


+ Line 6


In FIG. 22, a phylogenetic tree of BBX18 or AT2G21320 (also referred to as G1881) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. BBX18 (AT2G21320.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of BBX18 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 22. BBX18 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi4g35950.1_BRADI and Solyc02g084420.2.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 23A-23G show an alignment of BBX18 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved first and second B-box domains appear in boxes in FIGS. 23A-23B and FIGS. 23B-23C, respectively (for which the consensus sequences are SEQ ID NOs 854 and 855).



FIG. 24: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in three BBX18 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci, from low, where the activity of Rubisco is known to limit Asat, to high, where the capacity to regenerate RuBP limits Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least seven replicate plants for each line.


Legend for FIG. 24:



custom-character Control


Δ Line 4


⋄ Line 5


□ Line 6


In FIG. 25, a phylogenetic tree of bHLH60 or AT3G57800 (also referred to as G2144) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. bHLH60 (AT3G57800.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of bHLH60 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 25. bHLH60 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradilg35990.1_BRADI and Solyc10g079070.1.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 26A-26N show an alignment of bHLH60 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved bHLH domain appears in boxes FIGS. 26H-261 (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 856).


In FIG. 27, a phylogenetic tree of NF-YC6 or AT5G50480 (also referred to as G1820) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. NF-YC6 (AT5G50480.1) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of NF-YC6 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 27. NF-YC6 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi3g17790.1_BRADI and SolycO3g111450.1.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 28A-28T show an alignment of NF-YC6 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved NF-Y/histone-like domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 28J-28L (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 857).


In FIG. 29, a phylogenetic tree of bHLH121 or AT3G19860 (also referred to as G782) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. bHLH121 (AT3G19860.2) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of bHLH121 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 29. bHLH121 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi3g11520.1_BRADI and SolycOlg111130.2.1_SOLLY.



FIGS. 30A-30K show an alignment of bHLH121 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved bHLH domains appear in boxes in FIGS. 30B-30D, respectively (SEQ ID NO 858). A distinct putative leucine zipper motif and its consensus sequence that is found with these clade members comprising is found in FIG. 30D (SEQ ID NO: 859), enclosed in a dotted line box.



FIG. 31: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in four out of five bHLH121 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci over which the capacity to regenerate RuBP is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least five replicate plants for each line.


Legend for FIG. 31:



custom-character Control


+ Line 1


Δ Line 2


□ Line 3


◯ Line 4


× Line 5


In FIG. 32, a phylogenetic tree of BBX26 or AT1G60250 (also referred to as G1486) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. BBX26 (AT1G60250) appears in the rounded rectangle. An ancestral sequence of BBX26 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 32. BBX26 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by AT3G53200 ARATH and Solyc04007470.2 SOLLY.



FIGS. 33A-33E show an alignment of BBX26 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved B-box domain appears in boxes in FIG. 33A (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 860).



FIG. 34: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in four BBX26 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci over which the capacity to regenerate RuBP is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least six replicate plants for each line.


Legend for FIG. 34:



custom-character Control


* Line 1


+ Line 2


◯ Line 3


Δ Line 4


□ Line 5


In FIGS. 35A and 35B, a phylogenetic tree of PMT24 or AT1G29470 (also referred to as G837) clade members and related full length proteins were constructed using TreeBeST (Ruan et al., 2008. Nucleic Acids Res. 36 (suppl. 1): D735-D740) using the best command to identify the best tree from maximum likelihood and neighbor joining methods. PMT24 (AT1G29470.1) appears in the rounded rectangle in FIG. 35B. An ancestral sequence of PMT24 and closely-related sequences is represented by the node of the tree indicated by the arrow “A” in FIG. 35B. PMT24 clade members are considered those proteins that descended from ancestral sequence “A”, including the exemplary sequences shown in this figure that are bounded by Bradi2g57087.1_BRADI and GSVIVT01026451001_VITVI.



FIGS. 36A-36X show an alignment of PMT24 and representative clade-related proteins. The alignment was generated with MUSCLE (3.8) with default parameters. SEQ ID NOs: appear in parentheses after each Gene Identifier (GID). The conserved putative methyltransferase domain appears in boxes in FIGS. 36M-36S (for which the consensus sequence is SEQ ID NO 861).



FIG. 37: Plot showing increased light saturated photosynthesis (Asat) over a range of leaf sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) in four out of five PMT24 overexpression lines, compared to a control line. Data was collected over a range of Ci over which the capacity to regenerate RuBP is known to limit Asat. The solid line shown is a regression fitted to the data for the control line only. All data are the means±1 standard error for data collected on at least five replicate plants for each line.


Legend for FIG. 37:



custom-character Control


□ Line 3


◯ Line 4


× Line 5


Δ Line 6


* Line 7





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present description relates to polynucleotides and polypeptides for modifying phenotypes of plants, particularly those associated with increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency and increased yield with respect to a control plant. Throughout this disclosure, various information sources are referred to and/or are specifically incorporated. The information sources include scientific journal articles, patent documents, textbooks, and internet entries. While the reference to these information sources clearly indicates that they can be used by one of skill in the art, each and every one of the information sources cited herein are specifically incorporated in their entirety, whether or not a specific mention of “incorporation by reference” is noted. The contents and teachings of each and every one of the information sources can be relied on and used to make and use embodiments of the instant description.


As used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include the plural reference unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, a reference to “a host cell” includes a plurality of such host cells, and a reference to “a plant” is a reference to one or more plants, and so forth.


A “recombinant polynucleotide” is a polynucleotide that is not in its native state, e.g., the polynucleotide comprises a nucleotide sequence not found in nature, or the polynucleotide is in a context other than that in which it is naturally found, e.g., separated from nucleotide sequences with which it typically is in proximity in nature, or adjacent (or contiguous with) nucleotide sequences with which it typically is not in proximity. For example, the sequence at issue can be cloned into a vector, or otherwise recombined with one or more additional nucleic acid.


A “polypeptide” is an amino acid sequence comprising a plurality of consecutive polymerized amino acid residues e.g., at least about 15 consecutive polymerized amino acid residues. In many instances, a polypeptide comprises a polymerized amino acid residue sequence that is a regulatory polypeptide or a domain or portion or fragment thereof. Additionally, the polypeptide may comprise: (i) a localization domain; (ii) an activation domain; (iii) a repression domain; (iv) an oligomerization domain; (v) a protein-protein interaction domain; (vi) a DNA-binding domain; or the like. The polypeptide optionally comprises modified amino acid residues, naturally occurring amino acid residues not encoded by a codon, or non-naturally occurring amino acid residues.


“Protein” refers to an amino acid sequence, oligopeptide, peptide, polypeptide or portions thereof whether naturally occurring or synthetic.


In the instant description, “exogenous” refers to a heterologous nucleic acid or polypeptide that may not be naturally expressed in a plant of interest. Exogenous nucleic acids may be introduced into a plant in a stable or transient manner via, for example, transformation or breeding, and may thus serve to produce in planta a homologous RNA molecule and an encoded and functional polypeptide. Exogenous nucleic acids and polypeptides introduced thusly may comprise sequences that are wholly or partially identical or homologous to sequences that naturally occur in (i.e., are endogenous with respect to) the plant.


A “recombinant polypeptide” is a polypeptide produced by translation of a recombinant polynucleotide. A “synthetic polypeptide” is a polypeptide created by consecutive polymerization of isolated amino acid residues using methods well known in the art. An “isolated polypeptide,” whether a naturally occurring or a recombinant polypeptide, is more enriched in (or out of) a cell than the polypeptide in its natural state in a wild-type cell, e.g., more than about 5% enriched, more than about 10% enriched, or more than about 20%, or more than about 50%, or more, enriched, i.e., alternatively denoted: 105%, 110%, 120%, 150% or more, enriched relative to wild type standardized at 100%. Such an enrichment is not the result of a natural response of a wild-type plant. Alternatively, or additionally, the isolated polypeptide is separated from other cellular components with which it is typically associated, e.g., by any of the various protein purification methods herein.


“Identity” or “similarity” refers to sequence similarity between two polynucleotide sequences or between two polypeptide sequences, with identity being a more strict comparison. The phrases “percent identity” and “% identity” refer to the percentage of sequence similarity found in a comparison of two or more polynucleotide sequences or two or more polypeptide sequences. “Sequence similarity” refers to the percent similarity in base pair sequence (as determined by any suitable method) between two or more polynucleotide sequences. Two or more sequences can be anywhere from 0-100% similar or identical, or any integer value between 0-100%. Identity or similarity can be determined by comparing a position in each sequence that may be aligned for purposes of comparison. When a position in the compared sequence is occupied by the same nucleotide base or amino acid, then the molecules are identical at that position. A degree of similarity or identity between polyBLAST nucleotide sequences is a function of the number of identical, matching or corresponding nucleotides at positions shared by the polynucleotide sequences. A degree of identity of polypeptide sequences is a function of the number of identical amino acids at corresponding positions shared by the polypeptide sequences. A degree of homology or similarity of polypeptide sequences is a function of the number of amino acids at corresponding positions shared by the polypeptide sequences. The fraction or percentage of components in common is related to the homology or identity between the sequences. Alignments such as those of FIG. 2A-2E may be used to identify conserved domains and relatedness within these domains. An alignment may suitably be determined by means of computer programs known in the art, such as MACVECTOR software, (1999; Accelrys, Inc., San Diego, Calif.).


“Homologous sequences” refers to polynucleotide or polypeptide sequences that are similar due to common ancestry and sequence conservation. The terms “ortholog” and “paralog” are defined below in the section entitled “Orthologs and Paralogs”. In brief, orthologs and paralogs are evolutionarily related genes that have similar sequences and functions. Orthologs are structurally related genes in different species that are derived by a speciation event. Paralogs are structurally related genes within a single species that are derived by a duplication event.


“Functional homologs” are polynucleotide or polypeptide sequences, including orthologs and paralogs, that are similar due to common ancestry and sequence conservation and have identical or similar function at the catalytic, cellular, or organismal levels. The presently disclosed polypeptides, clade members and phylogenetically related sequences are “functionally-related and/or closely-related” by having descended from common ancestral sequences, and/or by being sufficiently similar to the sequences and domains listed in the instant Tables and Sequence Listing that they confer the same function to plants of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency, increased yield, increased grain yield, increased light use efficiency, increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, greater vigor, and/or greater biomass as compared to a control plant.


Functionally-related and/or closely-related polypeptides may be created artificially, semi-synthetically, or may occur naturally by having descended from the same ancestral sequence as the disclosed closely-related sequences, where the polypeptides have the function of conferring increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency to plants.


“Conserved domains” are recurring units in molecular evolution, the extents of which can be determined by sequence and structure analysis. A “conserved domain” or “conserved region” as used herein refers to a region in heterologous polynucleotide or polypeptide sequences where there is a relatively high degree of sequence identity between the distinct sequences. Conserved domains contain conserved sequence patterns or motifs that allow for their detection in, and identification and characterization of, polypeptide sequences. A Myb domain is an example of a conserved domain.


A transgenic plant is expected to have improved or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to a control plant when the transgenic plant is transformed with a recombinant polynucleotide encoding any of the listed polypeptide sequences or polypeptide found in polypeptide clade of any of the listed polypeptide sequences, or when the transgenic plant contains or expresses a listed polypeptide or a member of any of the same polypeptide clades sequence in which the listed polypeptides may be found.


The terms “highly stringent” or “highly stringent condition” refer to conditions that permit hybridization of DNA strands whose sequences are highly complementary, wherein these same conditions exclude hybridization of significantly mismatched DNAs. Polynucleotide sequences capable of hybridizing under stringent conditions with the polynucleotides of the present description may be, for example, variants of the disclosed polynucleotide sequences, including allelic or splice variants, or sequences that encode orthologs or paralogs of presently disclosed polypeptides. Nucleic acid hybridization methods are disclosed in detail by Kashima et al., 1985. Nature 313: 402-404; Sambrook et al., 1989. Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., and by Haymes et al., 1985. Nucleic Acid Hybridization: A Practical Approach, IRL Press, Washington, D.C., which references are incorporated herein by reference.


In general, stringency is determined by the temperature, ionic strength, and concentration of denaturing agents (e.g., formamide) used in a hybridization and washing procedure (for a more detailed description of establishing and determining stringency, see the section “Identifying Polynucleotides or Nucleic Acids by Hybridization”, below). The degree to which two nucleic acids hybridize under various conditions of stringency is correlated with the extent of their similarity. Thus, similar nucleic acid sequences from a variety of sources, such as within a plant's genome (as in the case of paralogs) or from another plant (as in the case of orthologs) that may perform similar functions can be isolated on the basis of their ability to hybridize with known related polynucleotide sequences. Numerous variations are possible in the conditions and means by which nucleic acid hybridization can be performed to isolate related polynucleotide sequences having similarity to sequences known in the art and are not limited to those explicitly disclosed herein. Such an approach may be used to isolate polynucleotide sequences having various degrees of similarity with disclosed polynucleotide sequences, such as, for example, encoded regulatory polypeptides listed in the Sequence Listing, or polypeptides that are phylogenetically related to the polypeptides listed in the Sequence Listing.


“Fragment”, with respect to a polynucleotide, refers to a clone or any part of a polynucleotide molecule that retains a usable, functional characteristic. Useful fragments include oligonucleotides and polynucleotides that may be used in hybridization or amplification technologies or in the regulation of replication, transcription or translation. A “polynucleotide fragment” refers to any subsequence of a polynucleotide, typically, of at least about nine consecutive nucleotides, preferably at least about 30 nucleotides, more preferably at least about 50 nucleotides, of any of the sequences provided herein. Exemplary polynucleotide fragments are the first sixty consecutive nucleotides of the polynucleotides listed in the Sequence Listing. Exemplary fragments also include fragments that comprise a region that encodes an conserved domain of a polypeptide. Exemplary fragments also include fragments that comprise a conserved domain of a polypeptide. Exemplary fragments include fragments that comprise an conserved domain of a polypeptide, for example, any of the domains listed in in the instant Tables or in the Sequence Listing.


Fragments may also include subsequences of polypeptides and protein molecules, or a subsequence of the polypeptide. Fragments may have uses in that they may have antigenic potential. In some cases, the fragment or domain is a subsequence of the polypeptide which performs at least one biological function of the intact polypeptide in substantially the same manner, or to a similar extent, as does the intact polypeptide. For example, a polypeptide fragment can comprise a recognizable structural motif or functional domain such as a DNA-binding site or domain that binds to a DNA promoter region, an activation domain, or a domain for protein-protein interactions, and may initiate transcription. Fragments can vary in size from as few as three amino acid residues to the full length of the intact polypeptide, but are preferably at least about 30 amino acid residues in length and more preferably at least about 60 amino acid residues in length.


Fragments may also refer to a functional fragment of a promoter region. For example, a recombinant polynucleotide capable of modulating transcription in a plant may comprise a nucleic acid sequence with similarity to, or a percentage identity to, a promoter region exemplified by a promoter sequence provided in the Sequence Listing (also see promoters listed in Example II), a fragment thereof, or a complement thereof, wherein the nucleic acid sequence, or the fragment thereof, or the complement thereof, regulates expression of a polypeptide in a plant cell.


The term “plant” includes whole plants, shoot vegetative organs/structures (for example, leaves, stems and tubers), roots, flowers and floral organs/structures (for example, bracts, sepals, petals, stamens, carpels, anthers and ovules), seed (including embryo, endosperm, and seed coat) and fruit (the mature ovary), plant tissue (for example, vascular tissue, ground tissue, and the like), pulped, pureed, ground-up, macerated or broken-up tissue, and cells (for example, guard cells, egg cells, and the like), and progeny of same. The class of the plants that can be transformed using the methods provided of the instant description is generally as broad as the class of higher and lower plants amenable to transformation techniques, including angiosperms (monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants), gymnosperms, ferns, horsetails, psilophytes, lycophytes, and bryophytes. These plant parts, organs, structures, cells, tissue, or progeny may contain a recombinant polynucleotide of interest, such as one that comprises a described or listed polynucleotide or one that encodes a described or listed polypeptide or a polypeptide that is phylogenetically-related to a listed polypeptide, and is thus a member of the same polypeptide clade.


A “control plant” as used in the present description refers to a plant cell, seed, plant component, plant tissue, plant organ or whole plant used to compare against transgenic or genetically modified plant for the purpose of identifying an enhanced phenotype in the transgenic or genetically modified plant. A control plant may in some cases be a transgenic plant line that comprises an empty vector or marker gene, but does not contain the recombinant polynucleotide of the present description that is expressed in the transgenic or genetically modified plant being evaluated. In general, a control plant is a plant of the same line or variety as the transgenic or genetically modified plant being tested. A suitable control plant would include a genetically unaltered or non-transgenic plant of the parental line used to generate a transgenic plant herein.


A “transgenic plant” refers to a plant that contains genetic material not found in a wild-type plant of the same species, variety or cultivar. The genetic material may include a transgene, an insertional mutagenesis event (such as by transposon or T-DNA insertional mutagenesis), an activation tagging sequence, a mutated sequence, a homologous recombination event or a sequence modified by chimeraplasty. Typically, the foreign genetic material has been introduced into the plant by human manipulation, but any method can be used as one of skill in the art recognizes.


A transgenic line or transgenic plant line refers to the progeny plant or plants deriving from the stable integration of heterologous genetic material into a specific location or locations within the genome of the original transformed cell.


A transgenic plant may contain an expression vector or cassette. The expression vector or cassette typically comprises a polypeptide-encoding sequence operably linked (i.e., under regulatory control of) to appropriate inducible, tissue-enhanced, tissue-specific, or constitutive regulatory sequences that allow for the controlled expression of the polypeptide. The expression vector or cassette can be introduced into a plant by transformation or by breeding after transformation of a parent plant. A plant refers to a whole plant as well as to a plant part, such as seed, fruit, leaf, or root, plant tissue, plant cells or any other plant material, e.g., a plant explant, as well as to progeny thereof, and to in vitro systems that mimic biochemical or cellular components or processes in a cell. In some other embodiments, the expression vectors or cassettes do not occur naturally. In some embodiments, the expression vectors or cassettes comprise a promoter of the present application, and a gene of interest, wherein the promoter and the gene of interest do not link to each other under natural conditions, e.g., the linkage between the promoter and the gene of interest does not exist in nature. For example, in some embodiments, the promoter and the gene of interest are derived from a same plant species, but are not linked to each other under natural conditions. In some embodiments, the promoter and the gene of interest are derived from two different species, e.g., the promoter and the gene of interest are heterologous to each other. In some embodiments, the gene of interest is derived from a different plant species, a bacteria species, a fungal species, a viral species, an algae species, or an animal species. In some embodiments, the expression vectors or cassettes comprise synthetic sequences.


“Germplasm” refers to a genetic material or a collection of genetic resources for an organism from an individual plant, a group of related individual plants (for example, a plant line, a plant variety or a plant family), or a clone derived from a plant line, plant variety, plant species, or plant culture.


A constitutive promoter is active under most environmental conditions, and in most plant parts. Regulation of protein expression in a constitutive manner refers to the control of expression of a gene and/or its encoded protein in all tissues regardless of the surrounding environment or development stage of the plant.


Alternatively, expression of the disclosed or listed polypeptides may be under the regulatory control of a promoter that is not a constitutive promoter. For example, tissue-enhanced (also referred to as tissue-preferred), tissue-specific, cell type-specific, and inducible promoters constitute non-constitutive promoters; that is, these promoters do not regulate protein expression in a constitutive manner. Tissue-enhanced or tissue-preferred promoters facilitate expression of a gene and/or its encoded protein in specific tissue(s) and generally, although perhaps not completely, do not express the gene and/or protein in all other tissues of the plant, or do so to a much lesser extent. Promoters under developmental control include promoters that preferentially initiate transcription in certain tissues, such as xylem, leaves, roots, or seeds. Such promoters are examples of tissue-enhanced or tissue-preferred promoters (see U.S. Pat. No. 7,365,186). Tissue-specific promoters generally confine transgene expression to a single plant part, tissue or cell-type, although many such promoters are not perfectly restricted in their expression and their regulatory control is more properly described as being “tissue-enhanced” or “tissue-preferred”. Tissue-enhanced promoters primarily regulate transgene expression in a limited number of plant parts, tissues or cell-types and cause the expression of proteins to be overwhelming restricted to a few particular tissues, plant parts, or cell types. An example of a tissue-enhanced promoter is a “photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter”, for which the promoter preferentially regulates gene or protein expression in photosynthetic tissues (e.g., leaves, cotyledons, stems, etc.). Tissue-enhanced promoters can be found upstream and operatively linked to DNA sequences normally transcribed in higher levels in certain plant tissues or specifically in certain plant tissues, respectively. “Cell-enhanced”, “tissue-enhanced”, or “tissue-specific” regulation thus refer to the control of gene or protein expression, for example, by a promoter that drives expression that is not necessarily totally restricted to a single type of cell or tissue, but where expression is elevated in particular cells or tissues to a greater extent than in other cells or tissues within the organism, and in the case of tissue-specific regulation, in a manner that is primarily elevated in a specific tissue. Tissue-enhanced or preferred promoters have been described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,365,186, or U.S. Pat. No. 7,619,133.


Another example of a promoter that is not a constitutive promoter is a “condition-enhanced” promoter, the latter term referring to a promoter that activates a gene in response to a particular environmental stimulus. This may include, for example, an abiotic stress, infection caused by a pathogen, light treatment, etc., and a condition-enhanced promoter drives expression in a unique pattern which may include expression in specific cell and/or tissue types within the organism (as opposed to a constitutive expression pattern in all cell types of an organism at all times).


“Wild type” or “wild-type”, as used herein, refers to a plant cell, seed, plant component, plant tissue, plant organ or whole plant that has not been genetically modified or treated in an experimental sense. Wild-type cells, seed, components, tissue, organs or whole plants may be used as controls to compare levels of expression and the extent and nature of trait modification with cells, tissue or plants of the same species in which a polypeptide's expression is altered, e.g., in that it has been knocked out, overexpressed, or ectopically expressed.


When two or more plants have “similar morphologies”, “substantially similar morphologies”, “a morphology that is substantially similar”, or are “morphologically similar”, the plants have comparable forms or appearances, including analogous features such as overall dimensions, height, width, mass, root mass, shape, glossiness, color, stem diameter, leaf size, leaf dimension, leaf density, internode distance, branching, root branching, number and form of inflorescences, and other macroscopic characteristics at a particular stage of growth. It may be difficult to distinguish two plants that are genotypically distinct but morphologically similar based on morphological characteristics alone. If the plants are morphologically similar at all stages of growth, they are also “developmentally similar”.


With regard to gene knockouts as used herein, the term “knockout” (KO) refers to a plant or plant cell having a disruption in at least one gene in the plant or cell, where the disruption results in a reduced expression or activity of the polypeptide encoded by that gene compared to a control cell. The knockout can be the result of, for example, genomic disruptions, including transposons, tilling, and homologous recombination, antisense constructs, sense constructs, RNA silencing constructs, or RNA interference. A T-DNA insertion within a gene is an example of a genotypic alteration that may abolish expression of that gene.


“Ectopic expression” or “altered expression” in reference to a polynucleotide indicates that the pattern of expression in, e.g., a transgenic plant or plant tissue, is different from the expression pattern in a wild-type plant or a reference plant of the same species. The pattern of expression may also be compared with a reference expression pattern in a wild-type plant of the same species. For example, the polynucleotide or polypeptide is expressed in a cell or tissue type other than a cell or tissue type in which the sequence is expressed in the wild-type plant, or by expression at a time other than at the time the sequence is expressed in the wild-type plant, or by a response to different inducible agents, such as hormones or environmental signals, or at different expression levels (either higher or lower) compared with those found in a wild-type plant. The term also refers to altered expression patterns that are produced by lowering the levels of expression to below the detection level or completely abolishing expression. The resulting expression pattern can be transient or stable, constitutive or inducible. In reference to a polypeptide, the term “ectopic expression or altered expression” further may relate to altered activity levels resulting from the interactions of the polypeptides with exogenous or endogenous modulators or from interactions with factors or as a result of the chemical modification of the polypeptides.


The term “overexpression” as used herein refers to a greater expression level of a gene in a plant, plant cell or plant tissue, compared to expression of that gene in a wild-type plant, cell or tissue, at any developmental or temporal stage. Overexpression can occur when, for example, the genes encoding one or more polypeptides are under the control of a strong promoter (e.g., the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S transcription initiation region). Overexpression may also be achieved by placing a gene of interest under the control of an inducible or tissue specific promoter, or may be achieved through integration of transposons or engineered T-DNA molecules into regulatory regions of a target gene. Other means for inducing overexpression may include making targeted changes in a gene's native promoter, e.g. through elimination of negative regulatory sequences or engineering positive regulatory sequences, though the use of targeted nuclease activity (such as zinc finger nucleases or TAL effector nucleases) for genome editing. Elimination of micro-RNA binding sites in a gene's transcript may also result in overexpression of that gene. Additionally, a gene may be overexpressed by creating an artificial transcriptional activator targeted to bind specifically to its promoter sequences, comprising an engineered sequence-specific DNA binding domain such as a zinc finger protein or TAL effector protein fused to a transcriptional activation domain. Thus, overexpression may occur throughout a plant, in specific tissues of the plant, or in the presence or absence of particular environmental signals, depending on the promoter or overexpression approach used.


Overexpression may take place in plant cells normally lacking expression of polypeptides functionally equivalent or identical to the present polypeptides. Overexpression may also occur in plant cells where endogenous expression of the present polypeptides or functionally equivalent molecules normally occurs, but such normal expression is at a lower level. Overexpression thus results in a greater than normal production, or “overproduction” of the polypeptide in the plant, cell or tissue. “Photosynthetic resource-use efficiency” is defined as the rate of photosynthesis achieved per unit use of a given resource. Consequently, increases in photosynthesis relative to the use of a given resource will improve photosynthetic resource-use efficiency. Photosynthesis is constrained by the availability of various resources, including light, water and nitrogen. Improving the efficiency with which photosynthesis makes use of light, water and nitrogen is a means for increasing plant productivity, crop growth, and yield. For the purposes of comparing a plant of interest to a reference or control plant, the ratio of photosynthesis to use of a given resource is often determined for a fixed unit of leaf area. Examples of increased photosynthetic resource-use efficiency would be an increase in the ratio of the rate of photosynthesis for a given leaf relative to, for example, the rate of transpiration from the same leaf area, nitrogen or chlorophyll invested in that leaf area, or light absorbed by that same leaf area. Increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency may result from increased photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic capacity, a decrease in leaf chlorophyll content, a decrease in percentage of nitrogen in leaf dry weight, increased transpiration efficiency, an increase in resistance to water vapor diffusion exerted by leaf stomata, an increased rate of relaxation of photoprotective reactions operating in the light harvesting antennae, a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C in above-ground biomass, and/or an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material.


“Photosynthetic rate” refers to the rate of photosynthesis achieved by a leaf, and is typically expressed relative to a unit of leaf area. The photosynthetic rate at any given time results from the photosynthetic capacity of the leaf (see below) and the biotic or abiotic environmental constraints prevailing at that time.


“Photosynthetic capacity” refers to the capacity for photosynthesis per unit leaf area and is set by the leafs investment in the components of the photosynthetic apparatus. Key components, among many, would be the pigments and proteins required to regulate light absorption and transduction of light energy to the photosynthetic reaction centers, and the enzymes required to operate the C3 and C4 dark reactions of photosynthesis. Increasing photosynthetic capacity is seen as an important means of increasing leaf and crop-canopy photosynthesis, and crop yield.


“Rubisco (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase) activity” refers to the activation state of Rubisco, the most abundant protein in the chloroplast and a key limitation to C3 photosynthesis. Increasing Rubisco activity by: increasing the amount of Rubisco in the chloroplast; impacting any combination of specific reactions that regulate Rubisco activity; or increasing the concentration of CO2 in the chloroplast, is seen as an important means to improving C3 leaf and crop-canopy photosynthesis and crop yield.


The “capacity for RuBP (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate) regeneration” refers to the rate at which RuBP, a key photosynthetic substrate is regenerated in the Calvin cycle. Increasing the capacity for RuBP regeneration by increasing the activity of enzymes in the regenerative phase of the Calvin cycle is seen as an important means to improving C3 leaf and crop-canopy photosynthesis and crop yield that will become progressively more important as atmospheric CO2 concentrations continue to rise.


“Leaf chlorophyll content” refers to the chlorophyll content of the leaf expressed either per unit leaf area or unit weight. Sun leaves in the upper part of crop canopies are thought to have higher leaf chlorophyll content than is required for photosynthesis. The consequence is that these leaves: invest more nitrogen in chlorophyll than is required for photosynthesis; are prone to photodamage associated with absorbing more light energy than can be dissipated via photosynthesis; and impair the transmission of light into the leaf and lower canopy where photosynthesis is light limited. Consequently, decreasing leaf chlorophyll content of upper canopy leaves is considered an effective means to improving photosynthetic resource-use efficiency.


“Non-photochemical quenching” is a term that covers photoprotective processes that dissipate absorbed light energy as heat from the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem II. Non-photochemical quenching is a key regulator of the efficiency with which electron transport is initiated by PSII and the efficiency of photosynthesis at low light. Decreasing the level of non-photochemical quenching, or increasing the speed with which it relaxes is expected to confer cumulative gains in photosynthesis every time the light intensity to which the canopy is exposed transitions from high to low, and is considered a means to improving canopy photosynthesis when integrated over a growing season.


“Nitrogen limitation” or “nitrogen-limiting” refers to nitrogen levels that act as net limitations on primary production in terrestrial or aquatic biomes. Much of terrestrial growth, including much of crop growth, is limited by the availability of nitrogen, which can be alleviated by nitrogen input through deposition or fertilization.


“Water use efficiency”, or WUE, measured as the biomass produced per unit transpiration, describes the relationship between water use and crop production. The basic physiological definition of WUE equates to the ratio of photosynthesis (A) to transpiration (T), also referred to as transpiration efficiency (Karaba et al. 2007, supra; Morison et al., 2008, supra).


“Stomatal conductance” refers to a measurement of the limitation that the stomatal pore imposes on CO2 diffusion into, and H2O diffusion out of, the leaf. Decreasing stomatal conductance will decrease water loss from the leaf and crop canopy via transpiration. This will conserve soil water, delay the onset and reduce the severity of drought effects on canopy photosynthesis and other physiology. Decreasing stomatal conductance will also decrease photosynthesis. However, the magnitude of the decrease in photosynthesis will typically be less than the decrease in transpiration, and transpiration efficiency will increase as a result. Conversely, increasing stomatal conductance can increase the diffusion of CO2 into the leaf and increase photosynthesis in a C3 leaf. Typically, transpiration will increase to a greater extent than photosynthesis, and transpiration efficiency will therefore decrease.


“Yield” or “plant yield” refers to increased plant growth, increased crop growth, increased biomass, and/or increased plant product production (including grain), and is dependent to some extent on temperature, plant size, organ size, planting density, light, water and nutrient availability, and how the plant copes with various stresses, such as through temperature acclimation and water or nutrient use efficiency. For grain crops, yield generally refers to an amount of grain produced or harvested per unit of land area, such as bushels or tons per acre or tonnes per hectare. Increased or improved yield may be measured as increased seed yield, increased plant product yield (plant products include, for example, plant tissue, including ground or otherwise broken-up plant tissue, and products derived from one or more types of plant tissue), or increased vegetative yield.


DESCRIPTION OF THE SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
Regulatory Polypeptides Modify Expression of Endogenous Genes

A regulatory polypeptide may include, but is not limited to, any polypeptide that can activate or repress transcription of a single gene or a number of genes. As one of ordinary skill in the art recognizes, regulatory polypeptides can be identified by the presence of a region or domain of structural similarity or identity to a specific consensus sequence or the presence of a specific consensus DNA-binding motif (see, for example, Riechmann et al., 2000a. supra).


Generally, regulatory polypeptides control the manner in which information encoded by genes is used to produce gene products and control various pathways, and may be involved in diverse processes including, but not limited to, cell differentiation, proliferation, morphogenesis, and the regulation of growth or environmental responses. Accordingly, one skilled in the art would recognize that by expressing the present sequences in a plant, one may change the expression of autologous genes or induce the expression of introduced genes. By affecting the expression of similar autologous sequences in a plant that have the biological activity of the present sequences, or by introducing the present sequences into a plant, one may alter a plant's phenotype to one with improved traits related to photosynthetic resource use efficiency. The sequences of the instant description may also be used to transform a plant and introduce desirable traits not found in the wild-type cultivar or strain. Plants may then be selected for those that produce the most desirable degree of over- or under-expression of target genes of interest and coincident trait improvement.


The sequences of the present description may be from any species, particularly plant species, in a naturally occurring form or from any source whether natural, synthetic, semi-synthetic or recombinant. The sequences of the instant description may also include fragments of the present amino acid sequences. Where “amino acid sequence” is recited to refer to an amino acid sequence of a naturally occurring protein molecule, “amino acid sequence” and like terms are not meant to limit the amino acid sequence to the complete native amino acid sequence associated with the recited protein molecule.


In addition to methods for modifying a plant phenotype by employing one or more polynucleotides and polypeptides of the instant description described herein, the polynucleotides and polypeptides of the instant description have a variety of additional uses. These uses include their use in the recombinant production (i.e., expression) of proteins; as regulators of plant gene expression, as diagnostic probes for the presence of complementary or partially complementary nucleic acids (including for detection of natural coding nucleic acids); as substrates for further reactions, e.g., mutation reactions, PCR reactions, or the like; as substrates for cloning e.g., including digestion or ligation reactions; and for identifying exogenous or endogenous modulators of the regulatory polypeptides. The polynucleotide can be, e.g., genomic DNA or RNA, a transcript (such as an mRNA), a cDNA, a PCR product, a cloned DNA, a synthetic DNA or RNA, or the like. The polynucleotide can comprise a sequence in either sense or antisense orientations.


Expression of genes that encode polypeptides that modify expression of endogenous genes, polynucleotides, and proteins are well known in the art. In addition, transgenic plants comprising polynucleotides encoding regulatory polypeptides may also modify expression of endogenous genes, polynucleotides, and proteins. Examples include Peng et al., 1997. Genes Development 11: 3194-3205, and Peng et al., 1999. Nature 400: 256-261. In addition, many others have demonstrated that an Arabidopsis regulatory polypeptide expressed in an exogenous plant species elicits the same or very similar phenotypic response. See, for example, Fu et al., 2001. Plant Cell 13: 1791-1802; Nandi et al., 2000. Curr. Biol. 10: 215-218; Coupland, 1995. Nature 377: 482-483; and Weigel and Nilsson, 1995. Nature 377: 482-500.


In another example, Mandel et al., 1992b. Cell 71-133-143, and Suzuki et al., 2001. Plant J. 28: 409-418, teach that a transcription factor expressed in another plant species elicits the same or very similar phenotypic response of the endogenous sequence, as often predicted in earlier studies of Arabidopsis transcription factors in Arabidopsis (see Mandel et al., 1992a. Nature 360: 273-277; Suzuki et al., 2001. supra). Other examples include Müller et al., 2001. Plant J. 28: 169-179; Kim et al., 2001. Plant J. 25: 247-259; Kyozuka and Shimamoto, 2002. Plant Cell Physiol. 43: 130-135; Boss and Thomas, 2002. Nature, 416: 847-850; He et al., 2000. Transgenic Res. 9: 223-227; and Robson et al., 2001. Plant J. 28: 619-631.


In yet another example, Gilmour et al., 1998. Plant J. 16: 433-442 teach an Arabidopsis AP2 transcription factor, CBF1, which, when overexpressed in transgenic plants, increases plant freezing tolerance. Jaglo et al., 2001. Plant Physiol. 127: 910-917, further identified sequences in Brassica napus which encode CBF-like genes and that transcripts for these genes accumulated rapidly in response to low temperature. Transcripts encoding CBF proteins were also found to accumulate rapidly in response to low temperature in wheat, as well as in tomato. An alignment of the CBF proteins from Arabidopsis, B. napus, wheat, rye, and tomato revealed the presence of conserved consecutive amino acid residues which bracket the AP2/EREBP DNA binding domains of the proteins and distinguish them from other members of the AP2/EREBP protein family (Jaglo et al., 2001. supra).


Regulatory polypeptides mediate cellular responses and control traits through altered expression of genes containing cis-acting nucleotide sequences that are targets of the introduced regulatory polypeptide. It is well appreciated in the art that the effect of a regulatory polypeptide on cellular responses or a cellular trait is determined by the particular genes whose expression is either directly or indirectly (e.g., by a cascade of regulatory polypeptide binding events and transcriptional changes) altered by regulatory polypeptide binding. In a global analysis of transcription comparing a standard condition with one in which a regulatory polypeptide is overexpressed, the resulting transcript profile associated with regulatory polypeptide overexpression is related to the trait or cellular process controlled by that regulatory polypeptide. For example, the PAP2 gene and other genes in the Myb family have been shown to control anthocyanin biosynthesis through regulation of the expression of genes known to be involved in the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway (Bruce et al., 2000. Plant Cell 12: 65-79; and Borevitz et al., 2000. Plant Cell 12: 2383-2393). Further, global transcript profiles have been used successfully as diagnostic tools for specific cellular states (e.g., cancerous vs. non-cancerous; Bhattacharjee et al., 2001. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98: 13790-13795; and Xu et al., 2001. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98: 15089-15094). Consequently, it is evident to one skilled in the art that similarity of transcript profile upon overexpression of different regulatory polypeptides would indicate similarity of regulatory polypeptide function.


Polypeptides and Polynucleotides of the Present Description.


The present description includes putative regulatory polypeptides, and isolated or recombinant polynucleotides encoding the polypeptides, or novel sequence variant polypeptides or polynucleotides encoding novel variants of polypeptides derived from the specific sequences provided in the Sequence Listing; the recombinant polynucleotides of the instant description may be incorporated in expression vectors for the purpose of producing transformed plants.


Because of their relatedness at the nucleotide level, the claimed sequences will typically share at least about 30% nucleotide sequence identity, or at least 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% sequence identity to one or more of the listed full-length sequences, or to a listed sequence but excluding or outside of the region(s) encoding a known consensus sequence or consensus DNA-binding site, or outside of the region(s) encoding one or all conserved domains. The degeneracy of the genetic code enables major variations in the nucleotide sequence of a polynucleotide while maintaining the amino acid sequence of the encoded protein.


Because of their relatedness at the protein level, the claimed nucleotide sequences will typically encode a polypeptide that is at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical in its amino acid sequence to the entire length of any of the polypeptides listed in the Sequence Listing or the instant Tables, or closely- or phylogenetically-related sequences.


Also provided are methods for modifying yield from a plant by modifying the mass, size or number of plant organs or seed of a plant by controlling a number of cellular processes, and for increasing a plant's photosynthetic resource use efficiency. These methods are based on the ability to alter the expression of critical regulatory molecules that may be conserved between diverse plant species. Related conserved regulatory molecules may be originally discovered in a model system such as Arabidopsis and homologous, functional molecules then discovered in other plant species. The latter may then be used to confer increased yield or photosynthetic resource use efficiency in diverse plant species.


Sequences in the Sequence Listing, derived from diverse plant species, may be ectopically expressed in overexpressor plants. The changes in the characteristic(s) or trait(s) of the plants may then be observed and found to confer increased yield and/or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency. Therefore, the polynucleotides and polypeptides can be used to improve desirable characteristics of plants.


The polynucleotides of the instant description are also ectopically expressed in overexpressor plant cells and the changes in the expression levels of a number of genes, polynucleotides, and/or proteins of the plant cells observed. Therefore, the polynucleotides and polypeptides can be used to change expression levels of genes, polynucleotides, and/or proteins of plants or plant cells. The data presented herein represent the results obtained in experiments with polynucleotides and polypeptides that may be expressed in plants for the purpose of increasing yield that arises from improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency.


Variants of the Disclosed Sequences.


Also within the scope of the instant description is a variant of a nucleic acid listed in the Sequence Listing, that is, one having a sequence that differs from the one of the polynucleotide sequences in the Sequence Listing, or a complementary sequence, that encodes a functionally equivalent polypeptide (i.e., a polypeptide having some degree of equivalent or similar biological activity) but differs in sequence from the sequence in the Sequence Listing, due to degeneracy in the genetic code. Included within this definition are polymorphisms that may or may not be readily detectable using a particular oligonucleotide probe of the polynucleotide encoding polypeptide, and improper or unexpected hybridization to allelic variants, with a locus other than the normal chromosomal locus for the polynucleotide sequence encoding polypeptide.


Differences between presently disclosed polypeptides and polypeptide variants are limited so that the sequences of the former and the latter are closely similar overall and, in many regions, identical. Presently disclosed polypeptide sequences and similar polypeptide variants may differ in amino acid sequence by one or more substitutions, additions, deletions, fusions and truncations, which may be present in any combination. These differences may produce silent changes and result in a functionally equivalent polypeptides. Thus, it will be readily appreciated by those of skill in the art, that any of a variety of polynucleotide sequences is capable of encoding the polypeptides and homolog polypeptides of the instant description. A polypeptide sequence variant may have “conservative” changes, wherein a substituted amino acid has similar structural or chemical properties.


Conservative substitutions include substitutions in which at least one residue in the amino acid sequence has been removed and a different residue inserted in its place. Such substitutions generally are made in accordance with the Table 1 when it is desired to maintain the activity of the protein. Table 1 shows amino acids which can be substituted for an amino acid in a protein and which are typically regarded as conservative substitutions.









TABLE 1







Possible conservative amino acid substitutions










Amino Acid
Conservative



Residue
substitutions







Ala
Ser



Arg
Lys



Asn
Gln; His



Asp
Glu



Gln
Asn



Cys
Ser



Glu
Asp



Gly
Pro



His
Asn; Gln



Ile
Leu, Val



Leu
Ile; Val



Lys
Arg; Gln



Met
Leu; Ile



Phe
Met; Leu; Tyr



Pro
Gly



Ser
Thr; Gly



Thr
Ser; Val



Trp
Tyr



Tyr
Trp; Phe



Val
Ile; Leu










The polypeptides provided in the Sequence Listing have a novel activity, such as, for example, regulatory activity. Although all conservative amino acid substitutions (for example, one basic amino acid substituted for another basic amino acid) in a polypeptide will not necessarily result in the polypeptide retaining its activity, it is expected that many of these conservative mutations would result in the polypeptide retaining its activity. Most mutations, conservative or non-conservative, made to a protein but outside of a conserved domain required for function and protein activity will not affect the activity of the protein to any great extent.


Deliberate amino acid substitutions may thus be made on the basis of similarity in polarity, charge, solubility, hydrophobicity, hydrophilicity, and/or the amphipathic nature of the residues, as long as a significant amount of the functional or biological activity of the polypeptide is retained. For example, negatively charged amino acids may include aspartic acid and glutamic acid, positively charged amino acids may include lysine and arginine, and amino acids with uncharged polar head groups having similar hydrophilicity values may include leucine, isoleucine, and valine; glycine and alanine; asparagine and glutamine; serine and threonine; and phenylalanine and tyrosine. More rarely, a variant may have “non-conservative” changes, e.g., replacement of a glycine with a tryptophan Similar minor variations may also include amino acid deletions or insertions, or both. Related polypeptides may comprise, for example, additions and/or deletions of one or more N-linked or O-linked glycosylation sites, or an addition and/or a deletion of one or more cysteine residues. Guidance in determining which and how many amino acid residues may be substituted, inserted or deleted without abolishing functional or biological activity may be found using computer programs well known in the art, for example, DNASTAR software (see U.S. Pat. No. 5,840,544).


Conserved Domains.


Conserved domains are recurring functional and/or structural units of a protein sequence within a protein family (for example, a family of regulatory proteins), and distinct conserved domains have been used as building blocks in molecular evolution and recombined in various arrangements to make proteins of different protein families with different functions. Conserved domains often correspond to the 3-dimensional domains of proteins and contain conserved sequence patterns or motifs, which allow for their detection in polypeptide sequences with, for example, the use of a Conserved Domain Database (for example, at www.ncbi.nlm nih gov/cdd). The National Center for Biotechnology Information Conserved Domain Database defines conserved domains as recurring units in molecular evolution, the extents of which can be determined by sequence and structure analysis. Conserved domains contain conserved sequence patterns or motifs, which allow for their detection in polypeptide sequences (Conserved Domain Database; www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/cdd/cdd.shtml).


Conserved domains may also be identified as regions or domains of identity to a specific consensus sequence (see, for example, Riechmann et al., 2000a. Science 290, 2105-2110; Riechmann et al., 2000b. Curr Opin Plant Biol 3: 423-434). Thus, by using alignment methods well known in the art, the conserved domains of the plant polypeptides, for example, for the Myb domain polypeptides may be determined. The polypeptides of the instant Tables have conserved domains associated with the disclosed functions of the proteins in which they are found and specifically indicated by amino acid coordinate start and stop sites. A comparison of the regions of these polypeptides allows one of skill in the art (see, for example, Reeves and Nissen, 1990. J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8573-8582; Reeves and Nissen, 1995. Prog. Cell Cycle Res. 1: 339-349) to identify domains or conserved domains for any of the polypeptides listed or referred to in this disclosure.


Conserved domain models are generally identified with multiple sequence alignments of related proteins spanning a variety of organisms (for example, conserved domains of the disclosed sequences can be found in the instant Figures, Tables, and the Sequence Listing). These alignments reveal sequence regions containing the same, or similar, patterns of amino acids. Multiple sequence alignments, three-dimensional structure and three-dimensional structure superposition of conserved domains can be used to infer sequence, structure, and functional relationships (Conserved Domain Database, supra). Since the presence of a particular conserved domain within a polypeptide (prophetically including any of the instantly listed polypeptides) is highly correlated with an evolutionarily conserved function, a conserved domain database may be used to identify the amino acids in a protein sequence that are putatively involved in functions such as binding or catalysis, as mapped from conserved domain annotations to the query sequence. For example, the presence in a protein of Myb domain that is structurally and phylogenetically similar to one or more domains shown in the instant Tables would be a strong indicator of a related function in plants (e.g., the function of regulating and/or improving yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant; i.e., a polypeptide with such a domain is expected to confer altered yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant when its expression level is altered). Sequences herein referred to as functionally-related and/or closely-related to the sequences or domains listed in the instant Tables, including polypeptides that are closely related to the polypeptides of the instant description, may have conserved domains that share at least at least nine base pairs (bp) in length and at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to the sequences provided in the Sequence Listing or in the instant Tables, and have similar functions in that the polypeptides of the instant description. Said polypeptides may, when their expression level is altered by suppressing their expression, knocking out their expression, or increasing their expression, confer at least one regulatory activity selected from the group consisting of increased yield, increased light use efficiency, increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency, greater vigor, and/or greater biomass as compared to a control plant.


Methods using manual alignment of sequences similar or homologous to one or more polynucleotide sequences or one or more polypeptides encoded by the polynucleotide sequences may be used to identify regions of similarity and conserved domains or other motifs. Such manual methods are well-known of those of skill in the art and can include, for example, comparisons of tertiary structure between a polypeptide sequence encoded by a polynucleotide that comprises a known function and a polypeptide sequence encoded by a polynucleotide sequence that has a function not yet determined. Such examples of tertiary structure may comprise predicted alpha helices, beta-sheets, amphipathic helices, leucine zipper motifs, zinc finger motifs, proline-rich regions, cysteine repeat motifs, and the like.


With respect to polynucleotides encoding presently disclosed polypeptides, a conserved domain refers to a subsequence within a polypeptide family (for example, in any of the instantly listed polypeptides or members of the listed polypeptide families) the presence of which is correlated with at least one function exhibited by members of the polypeptide family, and which exhibits a high degree of sequence homology, such as at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to a conserved domain of a polypeptide of the Sequence Listing or listed in the instant Tables that show the instant polypeptides and closely-related or phylogenetically-related sequences. Sequences that possess or encode for conserved domains that meet these criteria of percentage identity, and that have comparable biological and regulatory activity to the present polypeptide sequences, thus being members of the clade polypeptides or sequences listed in the sequence Listing or in Example I, are described. Sequences having lesser degrees of identity but comparable biological activity are considered to be equivalents.


Orthologs and Paralogs.


Homologous sequences as described above can comprise orthologous or paralogous sequences. Several different methods are known by those of skill in the art for identifying and defining these functionally homologous sequences. General methods for identifying orthologs and paralogs, including phylogenetic methods, sequence similarity and hybridization methods, are described herein; an ortholog or paralog, including equivalogs, may be identified by one or more of the methods described below.


As described by Eisen, 1998. Genome Res. 8: 163-167, evolutionary information may be used to predict gene function. It is common for groups of genes that are homologous in sequence to have diverse, although usually related, functions. However, in many cases, the identification of homologs is not sufficient to make specific predictions because not all homologs have the same function. Thus, an initial analysis of functional relatedness based on sequence similarity alone may not provide one with a means to determine where similarity ends and functional relatedness begins. Fortunately, it is well known in the art that protein function can be classified using phylogenetic analysis of gene trees combined with the corresponding species. Functional predictions can be greatly improved by focusing on how the genes became similar in sequence (i.e., by evolutionary processes) rather than on the sequence similarity itself (Eisen, supra). In fact, many specific examples exist in which gene function has been shown to correlate well with gene phylogeny (Eisen, supra). Thus, “[t]he first step in making functional predictions is the generation of a phylogenetic tree representing the evolutionary history of the gene of interest and its homologs. Such trees are distinct from clusters and other means of characterizing sequence similarity because they are inferred by techniques that help convert patterns of similarity into evolutionary relationships . . . . After the gene tree is inferred, biologically determined functions of the various homologs are overlaid onto the tree. Finally, the structure of the tree and the relative phylogenetic positions of genes of different functions are used to trace the history of functional changes, which is then used to predict functions of [as yet] uncharacterized genes” (Eisen, supra).


Within a single plant species, gene duplication may cause two copies of a particular gene, giving rise to two or more genes with similar sequence and often similar function known as paralogs. A paralog is therefore a similar gene formed by duplication within the same species. Paralogs typically cluster together or in the same clade (a group of similar genes) when a gene family phylogeny is analyzed using programs such as CLUSTAL (Thompson et al., 1994. Nucleic Acids Res. 22: 4673-4680; Higgins et al., 1996. Methods Enzymol. 266: 383-402). Groups of similar genes can also be identified with pair-wise BLAST analysis (Feng and Doolittle, 1987. J. Mol. Evol. 25: 351-360). For example, a clade of very similar MADS domain transcription factors from Arabidopsis all share a common function in flowering time (Ratcliffe et al., 2001. Plant Physiol. 126: 122-132), and a group of very similar AP2 domain transcription factors from Arabidopsis are involved in tolerance of plants to freezing (Gilmour et al., 1998. supra). Analysis of groups of similar genes with similar function that fall within one clade can yield sub-sequences that are particular to the clade. These sub-sequences, known as consensus sequences, can not only be used to define the sequences within each clade, but define the functions of these genes; genes within a clade may contain paralogous sequences, or orthologous sequences that share the same function (see also, for example, Mount, 2001, in Bioinformatics: Sequence and Genome Analysis, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., p. 543).


Regulatory polypeptide gene sequences are conserved across diverse eukaryotic species lines (Goodrich et al., 1993. Cell 75:519-530; Lin et al., 1991. Nature 353:569-571; Sadowski et al., 1988. Nature 335: 563-564). Plants are no exception to this observation; diverse plant species possess regulatory polypeptides that have similar sequences and functions. Speciation, the production of new species from a parental species, gives rise to two or more genes with similar sequence and similar function. These genes, termed orthologs, often have an identical function within their host plants and are often interchangeable between species without losing function. Because plants have common ancestors, many genes in any plant species will have a corresponding orthologous gene in another plant species. Once a phylogenic tree for a gene family of one species has been constructed using a program such as CLUSTAL (Thompson et al., 1994. supra; Higgins et al., 1996. supra) potential orthologous sequences can be placed into the phylogenetic tree and their relationship to genes from the species of interest can be determined. Orthologous sequences can also be identified by a reciprocal BLAST strategy. Once an orthologous sequence has been identified, the function of the ortholog can be deduced from the identified function of the reference sequence.


By using a phylogenetic analysis, one skilled in the art would recognize that the ability to deduce similar functions conferred by closely-related polypeptides is predictable. This predictability has been confirmed by our own many studies in which we have found that a wide variety of polypeptides have orthologous or closely-related homologous sequences that function as does the first, closely-related reference sequence. For example, distinct regulatory polypeptides, including:


(i) AP2 family Arabidopsis G47 (found in U.S. Pat. No. 7,135,616), a phylogenetically-related sequence from soybean, and two phylogenetically-related homologs from rice all can confer greater tolerance to drought, hyperosmotic stress, or delayed flowering as compared to control plants;


(ii) CAAT family Arabidopsis G481 (found in PCT patent publication no. WO2004076638), and numerous phylogenetically-related sequences from eudicots and monocots can confer greater tolerance to drought-related stress as compared to control plants;


(iii) Myb-related Arabidopsis G682 (found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,223,904 and 7,193,129) and numerous phylogenetically-related sequences from eudicots and monocots can confer greater tolerance to heat, drought-related stress, cold, and salt as compared to control plants;


(iv) WRKY family Arabidopsis G1274 (found in U.S. Pat. No. 7,196,245) and numerous closely-related sequences from eudicots and monocots have been shown to confer increased water deprivation tolerance, and


(v) AT-hook family soy sequence G3456 (found in U.S. patent publication no. 20040128712A1) and numerous phylogenetically-related sequences from eudicots and monocots, increased biomass compared to control plants when these sequences are overexpressed in plants.


Examples of Methods for Identifying Identity, Similarity, Homology and Relatedness.


Percent identity can be determined electronically, e.g., by using the MEGALIGN program (DNASTAR, Inc. Madison, Wis.). The MEGALIGN program can create alignments between two or more sequences according to different methods, for example, the clustal method (see, for example, Higgins and Sharp, 1988. Gene 73: 237-244). The clustal algorithm groups sequences into clusters by examining the distances between all pairs. The clusters are aligned pairwise and then in groups. Other alignment algorithms or programs may be used for preparing alignments and/or determining percentage identities, including Accelrys Gene, FASTA, BLAST, or ENTREZ, FASTA and BLAST, some of which may also be used to calculate percent similarity. Accelrys Gene is available from Accelrys, Inc., San Diego, Calif. Other programs are available as a part of the GCG sequence analysis package (University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.), and can be used with or without default settings. ENTREZ is available through the National Center for Biotechnology Information. In one embodiment, the percent identity of two sequences can be determined by the GCG program with a gap weight of 1, e.g., each amino acid gap is weighted as if it were a single amino acid or nucleotide mismatch between the two sequences (see U.S. Pat. No. 6,262,333).


Software for performing BLAST analyses is publicly available, e.g., through the National Center for Biotechnology Information (see internet website at www.ncbi.nlm nih gov/). This algorithm involves first identifying high scoring sequence pairs (HSPs) by identifying short words of length W in the query sequence, which either match or satisfy some positive-valued threshold score T when aligned with a word of the same length in a database sequence. T is referred to as the neighborhood word score threshold (Altschul, 1990. J. Mol. Biol. 215: 403-410; Altschul, 1993. J. Mol. Evol. 36: 290-300). These initial neighborhood word hits act as seeds for initiating searches to find longer HSPs containing them. The word hits are then extended in both directions along each sequence for as far as the cumulative alignment score can be increased. Cumulative scores are calculated using, for nucleotide sequences, the parameters M (reward score for a pair of matching residues; always >0) and N (penalty score for mismatching residues; always <0). For amino acid sequences, a scoring matrix is used to calculate the cumulative score. Extension of the word hits in each direction are halted when: the cumulative alignment score falls off by the quantity X from its maximum achieved value; the cumulative score goes to zero or below, due to the accumulation of one or more negative-scoring residue alignments; or the end of either sequence is reached. The BLAST algorithm parameters W, T, and X determine the sensitivity and speed of the alignment. The BLASTN program (for nucleotide sequences) uses as defaults a wordlength (W) of 11, an expectation (E) of 10, a cutoff of 100, M=5, N=−4, and a comparison of both strands. For amino acid sequences, the BLASTP program uses as defaults a wordlength (W) of 3, an expectation (E) of 10, and the BLOSUM62 scoring matrix (see Henikoff and Henikoff, 1989. supra; Henikoff and Henikoff, 1991. supra). Unless otherwise indicated for comparisons of predicted polynucleotides, “sequence identity” refers to the % sequence identity generated from a tBLASTx using the NCBI version of the algorithm at the default settings using gapped alignments with the filter “off” (see, for example, internet website at www.ncbi.nlm nih gov).


Other techniques for alignment are described by Doolittle, ed., 1996. Methods in Enzymology, vol. 266: “Computer Methods for Macromolecular Sequence Analysis” Academic Press, Inc., San Diego, Calif., USA. Preferably, an alignment program that permits gaps in the sequence is utilized to align the sequences. The Smith-Waterman is one type of algorithm that permits gaps in sequence alignments (see Shpaer, 1997. Methods Mol. Biol. 70: 173-187). Also, the GAP program using the Needleman and Wunsch alignment method can be utilized to align sequences. An alternative search strategy uses MPSRCH software, which runs on a MASPAR computer. MPSRCH uses a Smith-Waterman algorithm to score sequences on a massively parallel computer. This approach improves ability to pick up distantly related matches, and is especially tolerant of small gaps and nucleotide sequence errors. Nucleic acid-encoded amino acid sequences can be used to search both protein and DNA databases.


The percentage similarity between two polypeptide sequences, e.g., sequence A and sequence B, is calculated by dividing the length of sequence A, minus the number of gap residues in sequence A, minus the number of gap residues in sequence B, into the sum of the residue matches between sequence A and sequence B, times one hundred. Gaps of low or of no similarity between the two amino acid sequences are not included in determining percentage similarity. Percent identity between polynucleotide sequences can also be counted or calculated by other methods known in the art, e.g., the Jotun Hein method (see, for example, Hein, 1990. Methods Enzymol. 183: 626-645). Identity between sequences can also be determined by other methods known in the art, e.g., by varying hybridization conditions (see U.S. patent publication no. 20010010913).


The percent identity between two polypeptide sequences can also be determined using Accelrys Gene v2.5, 2006 with default parameters: Pairwise Matrix: GONNET; Align Speed: Slow; Open Gap Penalty: 10.000; Extended Gap Penalty: 0.100; Multiple Matrix: GONNET; Multiple Open Gap Penalty: 10.000; Multiple Extended Gap Penalty: 0.05; Delay Divergent: 30; Gap Separation Distance: 8; End Gap Separation: false; Residue Specific Penalties: false; Hydrophilic Penalties: false; Hydrophilic Residues: GPSNDQEKR. The default parameters for determining percent identity between two polynucleotide sequences using Accelrys Gene are: Align Speed: Slow; Open Gap Penalty: 10.000; Extended Gap Penalty: 5.000; Multiple Open Gap Penalty: 10.000; Multiple Extended Gap Penalty: 5.000; Delay Divergent: 40; Transition: Weighted.


In addition, one or more polynucleotide sequences or one or more polypeptides encoded by the polynucleotide sequences may be used to search against a BLOCKS (Bairoch et al., 1997. Nucleic Acids Res. 25: 217-221), PFAM, and other databases which contain previously identified and annotated motifs, sequences and gene functions. Methods that search for primary sequence patterns with secondary structure gap penalties (Smith et al., 1992. Protein Engineering 5: 35-51) as well as algorithms such as Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST; Altschul, 1990, supra; Altschul et al., 1993, supra), BLOCKS (Henikoff and Henikoff, 1991, supra), Hidden Markov Models (HMM; Eddy, 1996. Curr. Opin. Str. Biol. 6: 361-365; Sonnhammer et al., 1997. Proteins 28: 405-420), and the like, can be used to manipulate and analyze polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences encoded by polynucleotides. These databases, algorithms and other methods are well known in the art and are described in Ausubel et al., 1997. Short Protocols in Molecular Biology, John Wiley & Sons, New York, N.Y., unit 7.7, and in Meyers, 1995. Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, Wiley VCH, New York, N.Y., p 856-853.


Thus, the instant description provides methods for identifying a sequence similar or paralogous or orthologous or homologous to one or more polynucleotides as noted herein, or one or more target polypeptides encoded by the polynucleotides, or otherwise noted herein and may include linking or associating a given plant phenotype or gene function with a sequence. In the methods, a sequence database is provided (locally or across an internet or intranet) and a query is made against the sequence database using the relevant sequences herein and associated plant phenotypes or gene functions.


A further method for identifying or confirming that specific homologous sequences control the same function is by comparison of the transcript profile(s) obtained upon overexpression or knockout of two or more related polypeptides. Since transcript profiles are diagnostic for specific cellular states, one skilled in the art will appreciate that genes that have a highly similar transcript profile (e.g., with greater than 50% regulated transcripts in common, or with greater than 70% regulated transcripts in common, or with greater than 90% regulated transcripts in common) will have highly similar functions. Fowler and Thomashow, 2002. Plant Cell 14, 1675-1690, have shown that three paralogous AP2 family genes (CBF1, CBF2 and CBF3) are induced upon cold treatment, each of which can condition improved freezing tolerance, and all have highly similar transcript profiles. Once a polypeptide has been shown to provide a specific function, its transcript profile becomes a diagnostic tool to determine whether paralogs or orthologs have the same function.


Identifying Polynucleotides or Nucleic Acids by Hybridization.


Polynucleotides homologous to the sequences illustrated in the Sequence Listing and tables can be identified, e.g., by hybridization to each other under stringent or under highly stringent conditions. Stringency is influenced by a variety of factors, including temperature, salt concentration and composition, organic and non-organic additives, solvents, etc. present in both the hybridization and wash solutions and incubations, and the number of washes, as described in more detail in the references cited below (e.g., Sambrook et al., 1989. supra; Berger and Kimmel, eds., 1987. Methods Enzymol. 152: 507-511; Anderson and Young, 1985. “Quantitative Filter Hybridisation”, In: Hames and Higgins, ed., Nucleic Acid Hybridisation, A Practical Approach. Oxford, IRL Press, 73-111), each of which are incorporated herein by reference. Conditions that are highly stringent, and means for achieving them, are also well known in the art and described in, for example, Sambrook et al., 1989. supra; Berger and Kimmel, eds., 1987. Meth. Enzymol. 152:467-469; and Anderson and Young, 1985. supra.


Also provided in the instant description are polynucleotide sequences that are capable of hybridizing to the claimed polynucleotide sequences, including any of the polynucleotides within the Sequence Listing, and fragments thereof under various conditions of stringency (see, for example, Wahl and Berger, 1987. Methods Enzymol. 152: 399-407; Berger and Kimmel, ed., 1987. Methods Enzymol. 152:507-511). In addition to the nucleotide sequences listed in the Sequence Listing, full length cDNA, orthologs, and paralogs of the present nucleotide sequences may be identified and isolated using well-known methods. The cDNA libraries, orthologs, and paralogs of the present nucleotide sequences may be screened using hybridization methods to determine their utility as hybridization target or amplification probes.


Stability of DNA duplexes is affected by such factors as base composition, length, and degree of base pair mismatch. Hybridization conditions may be adjusted to allow DNAs of different sequence relatedness to hybridize. The melting temperature (Tm) is defined as the temperature when 50% of the duplex molecules have dissociated into their constituent single strands. The melting temperature of a perfectly matched duplex, where the hybridization buffer contains formamide as a denaturing agent, may be estimated by the following equations:






T
m(° C.)=81.5+16.6(log [Na+])+0.41(% G+C)−0.62(% formamide)−500/L  (I) DNA-DNA:






T
m(° C.)=79.8+18.5(log [Na+])+0.58(% G+C)+0.12(% G+C)2−0.5(% formamide)−820/L  (II) DNA-RNA:






T
m(° C.)=79.8+18.5(log [Na+])+0.58(% G+C)+0.12(% G+C)2−0.35(% formamide)−820/L  (III) RNA-RNA:


where L is the length of the duplex formed, [Na+] is the molar concentration of the sodium ion in the hybridization or washing solution, and % G+C is the percentage of (guanine+cytosine) bases in the hybrid. For imperfectly matched hybrids, approximately 1° C. is required to reduce the melting temperature for each 1% mismatch.


Hybridization experiments are generally conducted in a buffer of pH between 6.8 to 7.4, although the rate of hybridization is nearly independent of pH at ionic strengths likely to be used in the hybridization buffer (Anderson and Young, 1985. supra). In addition, one or more of the following may be used to reduce non-specific hybridization: sonicated salmon sperm DNA or another non-complementary DNA, bovine serum albumin, sodium pyrophosphate, sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS), polyvinyl-pyrrolidone, ficoll and Denhardt's solution. Dextran sulfate and polyethylene glycol 6000 act to exclude DNA from solution, thus raising the effective probe DNA concentration and the hybridization signal within a given unit of time. In some instances, conditions of even greater stringency may be desirable or required to reduce non-specific and/or background hybridization. These conditions may be created with the use of higher temperature, lower ionic strength and higher concentration of a denaturing agent such as formamide.


Stringency conditions can be adjusted to screen for moderately similar fragments such as homologous sequences from distantly related organisms, or to highly similar fragments such as genes that duplicate functional enzymes from closely related organisms. The stringency can be adjusted either during the hybridization step or in the post-hybridization washes. Salt concentration, formamide concentration, hybridization temperature and probe lengths are variables that can be used to alter stringency (as described by the formula above). As a general guideline, high stringency is typically performed at Tm−5° C. to Tm−20° C., moderate stringency at Tm−20° C. to Tm−35° C. and low stringency at Tm-35° C. to Tm−50° C. for duplex >150 base pairs. Hybridization may be performed at low to moderate stringency (25-50° C. below Tm), followed by post-hybridization washes at increasing stringencies. Maximum rates of hybridization in solution are determined empirically to occur at Tm−25° C. for DNA-DNA duplex and Tm−15° C. for RNA-DNA duplex. Optionally, the degree of dissociation may be assessed after each wash step to determine the need for subsequent, higher stringency wash steps.


High stringency conditions may be used to select for nucleic acid sequences with high degrees of identity to the disclosed sequences. An example of stringent hybridization conditions obtained in a filter-based method such as a Southern or Northern blot for hybridization of complementary nucleic acids that have more than 100 complementary residues is about 5° C. to 20° C. lower than the thermal melting point (Tm) for the specific sequence at a defined ionic strength and pH. Conditions used for hybridization may include about 0.02 M to about 0.15 M sodium chloride, about 0.5% to about 5% casein, about 0.02% SDS or about 0.1% N-laurylsarcosine, about 0.001 M to about 0.03 M sodium citrate, at hybridization temperatures between about 50° C. and about 70° C. More preferably, high stringency conditions are about 0.02 M sodium chloride, about 0.5% casein, about 0.02% SDS, about 0.001 M sodium citrate, at a temperature of about 50° C. Nucleic acid molecules that hybridize under stringent conditions will typically hybridize to a probe based on either the entire DNA molecule or selected portions, e.g., to a unique subsequence, of the DNA.


Stringent salt concentration will ordinarily be less than about 750 mM NaCl and 75 mM trisodium citrate. Increasingly stringent conditions may be obtained with less than about 500 mM NaCl and 50 mM trisodium citrate, to even greater stringency with less than about 250 mM NaCl and 25 mM trisodium citrate. Low stringency hybridization can be obtained in the absence of organic solvent, e.g., formamide, whereas high stringency hybridization may be obtained in the presence of at least about 35% formamide, and more preferably at least about 50% formamide. Stringent temperature conditions will ordinarily include temperatures of at least about 30° C., more preferably of at least about 37° C., and most preferably of at least about 42° C. with formamide present. Varying additional parameters, such as hybridization time, the concentration of detergent, e.g., sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and ionic strength, are well known to those skilled in the art. Various levels of stringency are accomplished by combining these various conditions as needed.


The washing steps that follow hybridization may also vary in stringency; the post-hybridization wash steps primarily determine hybridization specificity, with the most critical factors being temperature and the ionic strength of the final wash solution. Wash stringency can be increased by decreasing salt concentration or by increasing temperature. Stringent salt concentration for the wash steps will preferably be less than about 30 mM NaCl and 3 mM trisodium citrate, and most preferably less than about 15 mM NaCl and 1.5 mM trisodium citrate.


Thus, high stringency hybridization and wash conditions that may be used to bind and remove polynucleotides with less than the desired homology to the nucleic acid sequences or their complements that encode the present polypeptides include, for example:


6×SSC at 65° C.;


50% formamide, 4×SSC at 42° C.; or


0.5×SSC, 0.1% SDS at 65° C.;


with, for example, two wash steps of 10-30 minutes each. Useful variations on these conditions will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art.


A person of skill in the art would not expect substantial variation among polynucleotide species provided with the present description because the highly stringent conditions set forth in the above formulae yield structurally similar polynucleotides.


If desired, one may employ wash steps of even greater stringency, including about 0.2×SSC, 0.1% SDS at 65° C. and washing twice, each wash step being about 30 minutes, or about 0.1×SSC, 0.1% SDS at 65° C. and washing twice for 30 minutes. The temperature for the wash solutions will ordinarily be at least about 25° C., and for greater stringency at least about 42° C. Hybridization stringency may be increased further by using the same conditions as in the hybridization steps, with the wash temperature raised about 3° C. to about 5° C., and stringency may be increased even further by using the same conditions except the wash temperature is raised about 6° C. to about 9° C. For identification of less closely related homologs, wash steps may be performed at a lower temperature, e.g., 50° C.


An example of a low stringency wash step employs a solution and conditions of at least 25° C. in 30 mM NaCl, 3 mM trisodium citrate, and 0.1% SDS over 30 minutes. Greater stringency may be obtained at 42° C. in 15 mM NaCl, with 1.5 mM trisodium citrate, and 0.1% SDS over 30 minutes. Even higher stringency wash conditions are obtained at 65° C.−68° C. in a solution of 15 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM trisodium citrate, and 0.1% SDS. Wash procedures will generally employ at least two final wash steps. Additional variations on these conditions will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art (see, for example, U.S. patent publication no. 20010010913).


Stringency conditions can be selected such that an oligonucleotide that is perfectly complementary to the coding oligonucleotide hybridizes to the coding oligonucleotide with at least about a 5-10× higher signal to noise ratio than the ratio for hybridization of the perfectly complementary oligonucleotide to a nucleic acid encoding a polypeptide known as of the filing date of the application. It may be desirable to select conditions for a particular assay such that a higher signal to noise ratio, that is, about 15× or more, is obtained. Accordingly, a subject nucleic acid will hybridize to a unique coding oligonucleotide with at least a 2× or greater signal to noise ratio as compared to hybridization of the coding oligonucleotide to a nucleic acid encoding known polypeptide. The particular signal will depend on the label used in the relevant assay, e.g., a fluorescent label, a colorimetric label, a radioactive label, or the like. Labeled hybridization or PCR probes for detecting related polynucleotide sequences may be produced by oligolabeling, nick translation, end-labeling, or PCR amplification using a labeled nucleotide.


The present description also provides polynucleotide sequences that are capable of hybridizing to the claimed polynucleotide sequences, including any of the polynucleotides within the Sequence Listing, and fragments thereof under various conditions of stringency (see, for example, Wahl and Berger, 1987, supra, pages 399-407; and Kimmel, 1987. Meth. Enzymol. 152, 507-511). In addition to the nucleotide sequences in the Sequence Listing, full length cDNA, orthologs, and paralogs of the present nucleotide sequences may be identified and isolated using well-known methods. The cDNA libraries, orthologs, and paralogs of the present nucleotide sequences may be screened using hybridization methods to determine their utility as hybridization target or amplification probes.


EXAMPLES

It is to be understood that this description is not limited to the particular devices, machines, materials and methods described. Although particular embodiments are described, equivalent embodiments may be used to practice the claims.


The specification, now being generally described, will be more readily understood by reference to the following examples, which are included merely for purposes of illustration of certain aspects and embodiments of the present description and are not intended to limit the claims or description. It will be recognized by one of skill in the art that a polypeptide that is associated with a particular first trait may also be associated with at least one other, unrelated and inherent second trait which was not predicted by the first trait.


Example I
The Instant Polynucleotides and their Encoded or Predicted Polypeptides

The instant polypeptides sequences belong to distinct clades of polypeptides that include members from diverse species. In each case, clade member sequences derived from both eudicots and monocots may be shown to confer increased yield or tolerance to one or more abiotic stresses when the sequences were overexpressed. These studies can demonstrate that evolutionarily conserved genes from diverse species are likely to function similarly (i.e., by regulating similar target sequences and controlling the same traits), and that polynucleotides from one species may be transformed into closely-related or distantly-related plant species to confer or improve traits.


The listed polypeptide sequences may be found within the polypeptide clades of Myb Domain Protein 27 (“AtMYB27”; AT3G53200; G1311), ACBF-like family member RNA-binding protein 45A (“RBP45A”; AT5G54900; G1940), PCF family member TEOSINTE BRANCHED1//CYCLOIDEA//PCF 6 transcription factor 6 (“TCP6”; AT5G41030; G1936), Basic helix-loop-helix protein (bHLH) family member Phytochrome Interacting Factor 3-like 1 (“PIL1”: AT2G46970; G1649), GARP family member PHYTOCLOCK 1 (“PCL1”; AT3G46640.3; G2741), TH family member GT-2-Likel (“GTL1”; AT1G33240; G634), AP2 family members Dehydration-Responsive Element-Binding Protein 2H (“DREB2H”; AT2G40350; G1755), and ethylene-responsive transcription factor ERF087 (“ERF087”; AT1G28160; G2292), CCAAT family member Nuclear Transcription Factor Y subunit C-6 (“NF-YC6”; AT5G50480; G1820), Z—CO-like family member CONSTANS-like B-box zinc finger protein (“BBX18”, “F3K23.8”; AT2G21320; G1881), HLH/MYC family member Basic Helix-Loop-Helix 60 (“bHLH60”; AT3G57800.2; G2144), Z—CO-like family member CONSTANS-like B-box zinc finger protein (“BBX26”, AT1G60250, G1486), bHLH family member bHLH121 (At3g19860, G782), and Putative MethylTransferase 24 (“PMT24” NP_174240, G837).


Orthologs and paralogs of presently disclosed polypeptides may be cloned using compositions provided by the present description according to methods well known in the art. cDNAs can be cloned using mRNA from a plant cell or tissue that expresses one of the present sequences. Appropriate mRNA sources may be identified by interrogating Northern blots with probes designed from the present sequences, after which a library is prepared from the mRNA obtained from a positive cell or tissue. Polypeptide-encoding cDNA is then isolated using, for example, PCR, using primers designed from a presently disclosed gene sequence, or by probing with a partial or complete cDNA or with one or more sets of degenerate probes based on the disclosed sequences. The cDNA library may be used to transform plant cells. Expression of the cDNAs of interest is detected using, for example, microarrays, Northern blots, quantitative PCR, or any other technique for monitoring changes in expression. Genomic clones may be isolated using similar techniques to those.


Examples of orthologs of the Arabidopsis polypeptide sequences and their functionally similar orthologs are listed in the instant Tables and the Sequence Listing. In addition to the sequences in the instant Tables and the Sequence Listing, the claimed nucleotide sequences are phylogenetically and structurally similar to sequences listed in the Sequence Listing and can function in a plant by increasing yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant when ectopically expressed, or overexpressed, in a plant. Since a significant number of these sequences are phylogenetically and sequentially related to each other and may be shown to increase yield from a plant and/or photosynthetic resource use efficiency, one skilled in the art would predict that other similar, phylogenetically related sequences falling within the present clades of polypeptides, including AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide sequences, would also perform similar functions when ectopically expressed.


Background Information for AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24, and their Clade Member Sequences.


A number of phylogenetically-related sequences have been found in other plant species. The instant Tables list a number of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade sequences from diverse species. The tables include the SEQ ID NO: (Column 1), the species from which the sequence was derived and the Gene Identifier (“GID”; Column 2), the percent identity of the polypeptide in Column 1 to the first listed full length polypeptide (SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, or 444), as determined by a BLASTp analysis, for example, with a wordlength (W) of 3, an expectation (E) of 10, and the BLOSUM62 scoring matrix (Henikoff and Henikoff, 1989. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89:10915; Henikoff and Henikoff, 1991. Nucleic Acids Res. 19: 6565-6572) (Column 3), the amino acid residue coordinates for the conserved domains in amino acid coordinates beginning at the N-terminus, of each of the sequences (Column 4), the conserved domain sequences of the respective polypeptides (Column 5); the SEQ ID NO: of each of the domains (Column 6), and the percentage identity of the conserved domain in Column 5 to the conserved domain of the first listed sequence (as determined by a BLASTp analysis, wordlength (W) of 3, an expectation (E) of 10, and the BLOSUM62 scoring matrix, and with the proportion of identical amino acids in parentheses; Column 7).


Species abbreviations that appear in Columns 2 of the following Tables include: At—Arabidopsis thaliana; Bd—Brachypodium distachyon; Cc—Citrus clementina; Eg—Eucalyptus grandis; Gm−Glycine max; Os—Oryza sativa; Pt—Populus trichocarpa; Si—Setaria italica; Sl—Solanum lycopersicum; Vv—Vitus vinifera; Zm—Zea mays.


AtMYB27 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 2







Conserved ‘Myb domain 1’ of AtMYB27 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent




Col. 3
Col. 4


identity of the




Percent
Myb

Col. 6
Myb domain


Col. 1

identity of
domain 1

SEQ ID
in Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino

NO: of
the Myb


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Col. 5
Myb
domain 1 of


NO:
Identifier
AtMyb27
coordinates
Conserved Myb domain 1
domain 1
AtMyb27
















2
At/AtMyb27 or
100% 
11-58 
RGPWLEEEDERLVKVI
483
100% (48/48) 



AT3G53200.1
(238/238) 

SLLGERRWDSLAIVSG






LKRSGKSCRLRWMNYL





14
Vv/GSVIVT01033670001
72%
 8-55
KGSWLEEEDERLTAF
489
77% (37/48)




(83/115)

VGLLGERRWDSIARA






SGLKRSGKSCRLRWL






NYL





4
Gm/Glyma10g06680.1
44%
 8-55
KGTWLQEEDEQLTSF
484
75% (36/48)




(106/236) 

VTRLGERRWDSLAKV






AGLKRSGKSCRLRWM






NYL





6
Gm/Glyma13g20880.1
70%
 8-55
KGTWLQEEDEQLTSF
485
75% (36/48)




(77/110)

VARLGERRWDSLAKV






AGLKRSGKSCRLRWM






NYL





8
Cc/clementine0.9_029544m
49%
38-85
KGPWHEEEDELLVTF
486
72% (35/48)




(90/182)

VTLFGERRWDYIAKA






SGLKRSGKSCRLRWL






NYL





10
Eg/Eucgr.A01648.1
43%
15-62
KGPWIEQEDEILTAFV
487
68% (33/48)




(102/234) 

TVLGERRWDYIAKTS






GLKRSGKSCRLRWKN






YL





12
Pt/POPTR_0006s12400.1
48%
10-57
KGSWQEEEDERLTAS
488
68% (33/48)




(98/203)

ATLLGERKWDSIARLS






GLMRSGKSCRMRWL






NYL
















TABLE 3







Conserved ‘Myb domain 2’ of AtMYB27 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3
Col. 4


second Myb




Percent
Myb

Col. 6
domain


Col. 1

identity of
domain 2

SEQ ID
in Col.


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5
NO: of
5 to Myb


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Conserved Myb
Myb
domain 2 of


NO:
Identifier
AtMyb27
coordinates
domain 2
domain 2
AtMyb27
















2
At/AtMyb27 or
100% 
64-109
RGPMSQEEERIIFQLH
490
100% (46/46) 



AT3G53200.1
(238/238) 

ALWGNKWSKIARRL






PGRTDNEIKNYWRTHY





12
Pt/POPTR_0006s12400.1
48%
63-108
RGHISAEEEQIIIQFHG
495
77% (35/45)




(98/203)

QWGNKWARIARRLP






GRTDNEIKNYWRTHM





14
Vv/GSVIVT01033670001
72%
61-106
RCQISAEEEQIILQLH
496
76% (35/46)




(83/115)

KRWGNKWSWIARSL






PGRTDNEIKNYWRTHL





10
Eg/Eucgr.A01648.Eg/1
43%
68-113
HGPISPEEERIIIKFHE
494
72% (32/44)




(102/234) 

QWGNKWSRIAEKLP






GRTDNEIKNFWKTHL





4
Gm/Glyma10g06680.1
44%
61-106
HGHFSVEEEQLIVQL
491
70% (31/44)




(106/236) 

QQQLGNKWAKIARK






LPGRTDNEIKNFWRT






HL





6
Gm/Glyma13g20880.1
70%
61-106
HGHFSVEEEQLIVQL
492
68% (31/45)




(77/110)

QQELGNKWAKIARK






LPGRTDNEIKNYWKT






HL





8
Cc/clementine0.9_029544m
49%
91-139
HGYISTEEEQIIIQLHK
493
63% (29/46)




(90/182)

NIKIYLHGWSRIARSL






PGRTDNEIKNCWRTRI









Sequences that are functionally-related and/or closely-related to the polypeptides in the above Tables may be created artificially, semi-synthetically, or may occur naturally by having descended from the same ancestral sequence as the disclosed closely-related sequences, where the polypeptides have the function of conferring increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency to plants.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related AtMYB27 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus first Myb domain (Myb domain 1) consensus sequence, SEQ ID NO: 842:











X1GX3WX5X6X7EDEX11LX13X14X15X16X17X18X19GERX23







WDX26X27AX29X30X31GLX34RSGKSCRX42RWX45NYL






where X1=K or R; X3=any amino acid; X5=any amino acid; X6=Q or E; X7=Q or E; X11=any amino acid; X13=T or V; X14=any amino acid; X15=any amino acid; X16=any amino acid; X17=S, A, T or G; X18=any amino acid; X19=F, I, L, V or M; X23=R or K; X26=any amino acid; X27=I, L, V or M; X29=any amino acid; X30=any amino acid; X31=S or A; X34=any amino acid; X42=I, L, V or M; and X45=any amino acid.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related AtMYB27 clade polypeptides also may be identified by a consensus second Myb domain (Myb domain 2) consensus sequence, SEQ ID NO: 843:











X1X2X3X4SX6EEEX10X11IX13X14X15X16X17X18X19X20







X21X22X23X24X25WX27X28IAX31X32LPGRTDNEIKNX44







WX46TX48X49






where X1=any amino acid; X2=any amino acid; X3=any amino acid; X4=F, I, L, V or M; X6=any amino acid; X10=any amino acid; X1=I, L, V or M; X13=F, I, L, V or M; X14=Q or K; X15=F, I, L,


V or M; X16=H or Q; X17=any amino acid; X18=any amino acid; X19=any amino acid; X20=any amino acid; X21=any amino acid; X22=any amino acid; X23=L or absent; X24=H or absent; X25=G or absent; X27=S or A; X28=any amino acid; X31=any amino acid; X32=any amino acid; X44=any amino acid; X46=K or R; X48=any amino acid; and X49=any amino acid.


RBP45A Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 4







Conserved ‘RRM1 domain’ of RBP45A and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








RRM1




Col. 3



domain




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
in Col. 5


Col. 1

identity of
RRM1

SEQ ID
to RRM1


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
domain


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved RRM1
RRM1
of


NO:
Identifier
RBP45A
coordinates
domain
domain
RBP45A





42
At/RBP45A or
100% 
61-141
SLWIGDLQQWMDE
510
100% 



AT5G54900.1
(387/387)

NYIMSVFAQSGEAT

(81/81)






SAKVIRNKLTGQSE






GYGFIEFVSHSVAER






VLQTYNGAPMPSTE






QTFRLNWAQAG





40
At/AT4G27000.1
71%
81-161
SLWIGDLQPWMDEN
509
79%




(282/394)

YLMNVFGLTGEATA

(64/81)






AKVIRNKQNGYSEG






YGFIEFVNHATAER






NLQTYNGAPMPSSE






QAFRLNWAQLG





44
Pt/POPTR_0001s45000.1
70%
68-148
SLWIGDLQQWMDE
511
76%




(228/323)

NYILSIFSTTGEVVQ

(62/81)






AKVIRNKQTGYPEG






YGFIEFVSHAAAERI






LQTYNGTPMPNSEQ






TFRLNWATLG





46
Pt/POPTR_0011s14150.1
69%
71-151
SLWIGDLQQWMDE
512
72%




(231/331)

NYLLSIFSATGEIVQ

(59/81)






AKVIRNKQTGYPEG






YGFIEFVSRAAAERI






LQTYNGTPMPNSEQ






AFRLNWATLG





66
Sl/Solyc02g080420.2.1
66%
80-160
SLWIGDLQFWMDEQ
522
72%




(216/325)

YLLNCFAQTGEVTS

(59/81)






AKVIRNKQSGQSEG






YGFIEFISHAAAERN






LQAYNGTLMPNIEQ






NFRLNWASLG





68
Sl/Solyc10g005260.2.1
65%
77-157
TLWIGDLQFWMDE
523
71%




(218/333)

QYLYSCFAQTGEVV

(58/81)






SAKVIRNKQTQQSE






GYGFIEFNSHAAAER






NLQAYNGTLMPNIE






QNFRLNWASLG





70
Sl/Solyc03g031720.2.1
64%
73-153
SLWIGDLQFWMDEQ
524
70%




(215/335)

YIQNCFAHTGEVAS

(57/81)






VKVIRNKQSGQSEG






YGFVEFISHAAAERN






LQTYNGSMMPNSEQ






PFRLNWASLG





48
Sl/Solyc07g064510.2.1
67%
82-162
SLWIGDLQYWMDES
513
69%




(218/324)

YLSTCFYHTGELVS

(56/81)






AKVIRNKQSGQSEG






YGFLEFRSHAAAET






VLQTYNGALMPNVE






QNFRMNWASLG





62
Gm/Glyma13g27570.1
64%
67-147
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
520
69%




(214/331)

NYLYTCFAHTGEVT

(56/81)






SVKVIRNKQTSQSEG






YGFIEFNSRAGAERI






LQTYNGAIMPNGGQ






SFRLNWATFS





24
Os/LOC_Os08g09100.1
63%
96-174
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
501
69%




(206/325)

NYISACFAPTGELQS

(56/81)






VKLIRDKQTGQLQG






YGFIEFTSHAGAERV






LQTYNGAMMPNVE






QTYRLNWAS





54
Pt/POPTR_0004s01690.1
61%
78-158
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
516
69%




(213/349)

NYIASCFAHTGEVAS

(56/81)






VKIIRNKQTSQIEGY






GFIEMTSHGAAERIL






QTYNGTPMPNGEQN






FRLNWASFS





52
At/AT1G11650.2
63%
63-144
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
515
68%




(206/325)

NFLYGCFAHTGEMV

(56/82)






SAKVIRNKQTGQVE






GYGFIEFASHAAAER






VLQTFNNAPIPSFPD






QLFRLNWASLS





60
Gm/Glyma17g01800.1
66%
66-146
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
519
67%




(218/327)

NYLYTCFAHTGELA

(55/81)






SVKVIRNKQTSQSEG






YGFIEFTSRAGAERV






LQTYNGTIMPNGGQ






NFRLNWATFS





64
Gm/Glyma15g11380.1
64%
68-148
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
521
67%




(215/333)

NYLYTCFAHTGEVS

(55/81)






SVKVIRNKQTSQSEG






YGFIEFNSRAGAERI






LQTYNGAIMPNGGQ






SFRLNWATFS





38
Zm/GRMZM2G002874_T01
68%
71-151
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
508
66%




(219/322)

NYLYSCFSQAGEVIS

(54/81)






VKIIRNKQTGQPEGY






GFIEFSNHAVAEQVL






QNYNGQMMPNVNQ






PFKLNWATSG





58
Gm/Glyma07g38940.1
66%
62-142
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
518
66%




(217/326)

NYLYTCLAHTGEVA

(54/81)






SVKVIRNKQTSQSEG






YGFIEFTSRAGAERV






LQTYNGTIMPNGGQ






NFRLNWATLS





50
Eg/Eucgr.F03462.1
69%
65-145
SLWIGDLQPHMDET
514
65%




(226/323)

YLLNCFAHSGEVLS

(53/81)






AKVIRNKQTALPEG






YGFIEFMTRAAAERI






LQTYNGTLMPNSDQ






NFRLNWATLG





36
Os/LOC_Os03g37270.1
67%
68-148
TLWIGDLQFWMEEN
507
65%




(218/323)

YLYNCFSQAGELISA

(53/81)






KIIRNKQTGQPEGYG






FIEFGSHAIAEQVLQ






GYNGQMMPNGNQV






FKLNWATSG





56
Eg/Eucgr.D01310.1
63%
93-171
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
517
64%




(193/303)

AYLGTCFAATGEVA

(52/81)






NVKVIRNKQTMQPE






GYGFIEFYTRAAAER






VLQTYNGAIMPNGG






QSFRLNWAS





26
Zm/GRMZM2G426591_T01
62%
122-200
TLWIGDLQYWMDD
502
62%




(204/324)

NYIYGCFASTGEVQ

(51/81)






NVKLIRDKHTGQLQ






GYGFIEFISRAAAER






VLQTYNGTMMPNV






ELPFRLNWAS





22
Bd/Bradi3g15180.1
56%
99-177
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
500
61%




(213/376)

NYVYGCFAHTGEVQ

(50/81)






SVKLIRDKQTGQLQ






GYGFVEFTTRAGAE






RVLQTYNGATMPN






VEMPYRLNWAS





16
Bd/Bradi5g22410.1
61%
89-167
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
497
60%




(201/327)

TYIHGCFASTGELQS

(49/81)






VKLIRDKQTGQLQG






YGFVEFTSHAAAER






VLQGYNGHAMPNV






DLAYRLNWAS





30
Os/LOC_Os07g33330.1
58%
129-210 
SLWIGDLQYWMDES
504
59%




(205/348)

YLSNAFAPMGQQVT

(49/82)






SVKVIRNKQSGHSE






GYGFIEFQSHAAAE






YALANFNGRMMLN






VDQLFKLNWASSG





18
Zm/GRMZM2G012628_T01
58%
93-171
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
498
59%




(191/329)

NYVFGCFSNTGEVQ

(48/81)






NVKLIRDKNSGQLQ






GYGFVEFTSRAAAE






RVLQTYNGQMMPN






VDLTFRLNWAS





20
Zm/GRMZM2G058098_T02
58%
87-165
TLWIGDLQYWMDD
499
58%




(192/331)

NYVFGCFSNTGEVQ

(47/81)






NVKLIRDKNSGQLQ






GYGFVEFTSRAAAE






RVLQTYNGQMMPN






VDLTFRLNWAS





32
Zm/GRMZM2G127510_T01
53%
115-197 
TLWIGDLQHWMDE
505
57%




(191/354)

NYLHYNAFAAVAQ

(48/83)






QIASVKIIRNKQTGH






SEGYGFIEFYSRAAA






EHTLMNFNGQMMP






NVEMTFKLNWASAS





34
Zm/GRMZM2G169615_T01
55%
147-229 
TLWIGDLQYWMDE
506
56%




(188/338)

NYLHYNAFAPVAQQ

(47/83)






IASVKIIRNKQTGHS






EGYGFIEFYSQAAAE






HTLMNFNGQMMPNI






EMAFKLNWASAS





28
Bd/Bradi1g26210.1
55%
115-197 
SLWIGDLQYWMDE
503
56%




(181/324)

AYLHNAFAPMGPQQ

(47/83)






VASVKIIRNKQTGQP






EGYGFIEFHSRAAAE






YALASFNGHAMPNV






DLPFKLNWASAS
















TABLE 5







Conserved ‘RRM2 domain’ of RBP45A and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








RRM2




Col. 3



domain




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
in Col. 5


Col. 1

identity of
RRM2

SEQ ID
to RRM2


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
domain


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved RRM2
RRM2
of


NO:
Identifier
RBP45A
coordinates
domain
domain
RBP45A





42
At/RBP45A or
100% 
153-232
DHTIFVGDLAPEVTD
538
100% 



AT5G54900.1
(387/387)

YMLSWITKNVYGSV

(80/80)






KGAKVVLDRTTGRS






KGYGFVRFADENEQ






MRAMTEMNGQYCS






TRPMRIGPAA





40
At/AT4G27000.1
71%
172-251
EHTVFVGDLAPDVT
537
83%




(282/394)

DHMLTETFKAVYSS

(67/80)






VKGAKVVNDRTTG






RSKGYGFVRFADES






EQIRAMTEMNGQYC






SSRPMRTGPAA





44
Pt/POPTR_0001s45000.1
70%
159-238
DYTVFIGDLAADVN
539
82%




(228/323)

DYLLQETFRNVYSS

(66/80)






VKGAKVVTDRVTG






RSKGYGFVRFADEN






EQMRAMVEMNGQY






CSTRPMRIGPAA





46
Pt/POPTR_0011s14150.1
69%
162-241
DFTVFVGDLAADVN
540
81%




(231/331)

DYLLQETFRNVYPS

(65/80)






VKGAKVVTDRVTG






RSKGYGFIRFADENE






QRRAMVEMNGQYC






STRPMRIGPAA





50
Eg/Eucgr.F03462.1
69%
156-235
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
542
78%




(226/323)

DHMLQETFRAHYPS

(63/80)






VKGAKIVIDRTTGRS






KGYGFVRFGDETEQ






LRAMTEMNGMYCS






SRPMRIGPAA





38
Zm/GRMZM2G002874_T01
68%
162-241
DYTIFVGDLASDVT
536
77%




(219/322)

DFILQDTFKSRYPSV

(62/80)






KGAKVVFDRTTGRS






KGYGFVKFADSDEQ






TRAMTEMNGQYCSS






RAMRLGPAS





36
Os/LOC_Os03g37270.1
67%
159-238
DYTIFVGDLASDVT
535
77%




(218/323)

DLILQDTFKAHYQS

(62/80)






VKGAKVVFDRSTGR






SKGYGFVKFGDLDE






QTRAMTEMNGQYC






SSRPMRIGPAS





52
At/AT1G11650.2
63%
154-233
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
543
77%




(206/325)

DYILLETFRASYPSV

(62/80)






KGAKVVIDRVTGRT






KGYGFVRFSDESEQI






RAMTEMNGVPCSTR






PMRIGPAA





48
Sl/Solyc07g064510.2.1
67%
172-251
EYTIFVGDLAADVT
541
76%




(218/324)

DYVLQETFKPVYSS

(61/80)






VKGAKVVTDRITGR






TKGYGFVKFSDESE






QLRAMTEMNGVLC






SSRPMRIGPAA





70
Sl/Solyc03g031720.2.1
64%
164-243
EYTIFVGDLAADVT
552
76%




(215/335)

DYMLQETFRANYPS

(61/80)






VKGAKVVTDRVTG






RTKGYGFVKFADES






EQLHAMTEMNGKF






CSTRPMRIGPAA





66
Sl/Solyc02g080420.2.1
66%
171-250
EYTIFVGDLAADVS
550
75%




(216/325)

DYMLQETFRANYPS

(60/80)






VKGAKVVTDKATG






RTKGYGFVKFGDES






EQLRAMTEMNGQF






CSTRPMRIGPAA





58
Gm/Glyma07g38940.1
66%
153-232
DHTIFVGDLAADVT
546
75%




(217/326)

DYLLQETFRARYPSI

(60/80)






KGAKVVIDRLTGRT






KGYGFVRFGDESEQ






VRAMTEMQGVLCS






TRPMRIGPAS





68
Sl/Solyc10g005260.2.1
65%
168-247
EYTIFVGDLAADVT
551
75%




(218/333)

DYMLQETFRPNYPSI

(60/80)






KGAKVVTDRATGH






TKGYGFVRFGDESE






QLRAMTEMNGKFCS






TRPMRIGPAA





62
Gm/Glyma13g27570.1
64%
159-238
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
548
75%




(214/331)

DYLLQETFRARYNS

(60/80)






VKGAKVVIDRLTGR






TKGYGFVRFSDESE






QVRAMTEMQGVLC






STRPMRIGPAS





64
Gm/Glyma15g11380.1
64%
160-239
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
549
75%




(215/333)

DYLLQETFRARYNS

(60/80)






VKGAKVVIDRLTGR






TKGYGFVRFSEESEQ






MRAMTEMQGVLCS






TRPMRIGPAS





60
Gm/Glyma17g01800.1
66%
157-236
DHTIFVGDLAADVT
547
73%




(218/327)

DYLLQETFRARYPS

(59/80)






AKGAKVVIDRLTGR






TKGYGFVRFGDESE






QVRAMSEMQGVLC






STRPMRIGPAS





30
Os/LOC_Os07g33330.1
58%
222-301
EHTIFVGDLASDVTD
532
73%




(205/348)

SMLEEAFKTSYPSVR

(59/80)






GAKVVFDKVTGRSK






GYGFVRFGDENEQT






RAMTEMNGATLSTR






QMRLGPAA





24
Os/LOC_Os08g09100.1
63%
184-263
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
529
72%




(206/325)

DYILQETFRVHYPSV

(58/80)






KGAKVVTDKMTMR






SKGYGFVKFGDPSE






QARAMTEMNGMVC






SSRPMRIGPAA





26
Zm/GRMZM2G426591_T01
62%
210-289
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
530
72%




(204/324)

DYVLQETFRAHYPS

(58/80)






VKGAKVVTDKLTM






RTKGYGFVKFGDPN






EQARAMTEMNGML






CSSRPMRIGPAA





16
Bd/Bradi5g22410.1
61%
177-256
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
525
72%




(201/327)

DYILQETFRVHYPSV

(58/80)






KGAKVVTDKMTMR






SKGYGFVKFGDPTE






QARAMTEMNGMPC






SSRPMRIGPAA





54
Pt/POPTR_0004s01690.1
61%
168-247
DFTIFVGDLAADVT
544
72%




(213/349)

DFMLQETFRAHFPS

(58/80)






VKGAKVVIDRLTGR






TKGYGFVRFGDESE






QLRAMTEMNGAFCS






TRPMRVGLAS





22
Bd/Bradi3g15180.1
56%
187-266
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
528
72%




(213/376)

DYILQETFRVHYPSV

(58/80)






KGAKVVTDKLTMR






SKGYGFVKFSDPTE






QTRAMTEMNGMVC






SSRPMRIGPAA





34
Zm/GRMZM2G169615_T01
55%
240-319
DHAIFVGDLAPDVT
534
72%




(188-338)

DSMLEDVFRANYPS

(58/80)






VRGAKVVVDRITGR






PKGYGFVHFGDLNE






QARAMTEMNGMML






STRKMRIGAAA





28
Bd/Bradi1g26210.1
55%
208-287
DHTIFVGDLASDVT
531
72%




(181/324)

DSMLQEIFKASYPSV

(58/80)






RGANVVTDRATGRS






KGYGFVRFGDVNEQ






TRAMTEMNGVTLSS






RQLRIGPAA





20
Zm/GRMZM2G058098_T02
58%
175-254
DYTIFVGDLAADVT
527
71%




(192/331)

DYLLQETFRVHYPS

(57/80)






VKGAKVVTDKLTM






RTKGYGFVKFGDPT






EQARAMTEMNGMP






CSSRPMRIGPAA





18
Zm/GRMZM2G012628_T01
58%
181-260
EYTIFVGDLAADVT
526
70%




(191/329)

DYLLQETFRVHYPS

(56/80)






VKGAKVVTDKLTM






RTKGYGFVKFGDPT






EQARAMTEMNGMP






CSSRPMRIGPAA





32
Zm/GRMZM2G127510_T01
53%
208-287
DRTIFVGDLAHDVT
533
68%




(191/354)

DSMLEDVFRAKYPS

(55/80)






VRGANVVVDRMTG






WPKGFGFVRFGDLN






EQARAMTEMNGML






LSTRQMRIGAAA





56
Eg/Eucgr.D01310.1
63%
182-261
DYTIFVGDLASDVT
545
67%




(193/303)

DYMLQEMFRGRYPS

(54/80)






VRSAKVVMDRLTSR






TKGYGFVKFGDESE






QIRAMSEMNGVFLS






TRPMRIGLAT
















TABLE 6







Conserved ‘RRM3 domain’ of RBP45A and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



RRM3




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
RRM3

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
RRM3


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved RRM3
RRM3
domain of


NO:
Identifier
RBP45A
coordinates
domain
domain
RBP45A





42
At/RBP45A or
100% 
260-332
TTIFVGGLDANVTD
566
100% 



AT5G54900.1
(387/387)

DELKSIFGQFGELLH

(73/73)






VKIPPGKRCGFVQY






ANKASAEHALSVLN






GTQLGGQSIRLSWG






RS





40
At/AT4G27000.1
71%
278-350
TTIFVGAVDQSVTED
565
83%




(282/394)

DLKSVFGQFGELVH

(61/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQY






ANRACAEQALSVLN






GTQLGGQSIRLSWG






RS





50
Eg/Eucgr.F03462.1
69%
265-337
TTIFVGGLDPSVSDD
570
75%




(226/323)

LLRQVFSQYGELHH

(55/73)






VKIPPGKRCGFVQFT






SRACAEQALLMLNG






TQLGGQSIRLSWGRS





38
Zm/GRMZM2G002874_T01
68%
271-343
TTVFVGGLDPSVTD
564
75%




(219/322)

ELLKQTFSPYGELLY

(55/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFVQY






SNRASAEEAIRVLNG






SQLGGQSIRLSWGRS





66
Sl/Solyc02g080420.2.1
66%
278-350
TTIFVGNLDSNITDE
578
73%




(216/325)

HLRQIFGHYGQLLH

(54/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFIQFA






DRSCAEEALRVLNG






TQLGGQSIRLSWGRS





60
Gm/Glyma17g01800.1
66%
265-337
TTIFVGNLDPNVTDD
575
73%




(218/327)

HLRQVFGQYGELVH

(54/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ADRSCAEEALRVLN






GTLLGGQNVRLSWG






RS





70
Sl/Solyc03g031720.2.1
64%
271-343
TTIFVGNLDANVTD
580
73%




(215/335)

DHLRQVFGNYGQLL

(54/73)






HVKIPVGKRCGFVQ






FADRSCAEEALRAL






SGTQLGGQTIRLSW






GRS





46
Pt/POPTR_0011s14150.1
69%
270-342
TTIFVGALDPSVTDD
568
72%




(231/331)

TLRAVFSKYGELVH

(53/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ANRTSAEQALSMLN






GTQIAGQNIRLSWG






RS





36
Os/LOC_Os03g37270.1
67%
268-340
TTVFVGGLDPSVTD
563
72%




(218/323)

EVLKQAFSPYGELV

(53/73)






YVKIPVGKRCGFVQ






YSNRASAEEAIRML






NGSQLGGQSIRLSW






GRS





58
Gm/Glyma07g38940.1
66%
261-333
TTIFVGNLDPNVTDD
574
72%




(217/326)

HLRQVFGHYGELVH

(53/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ADRSCAEEALRVLN






GTLLGGQNVRLSWG






RS





62
Gm/Glymal3g27570.1
64%
269-341
TTIFVGNLDPNVTDD
576
72%




(214/331)

HLRQVFSQYGELVH

(53/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ADRSCAEEALRVLN






GTLLGGQNVRLSWG






RS





64
Gm/Glyma15g11380.1
64%
270-342
TTIFVGNLDPNVTDD
577
72%




(215/333)

HLRQVFSQYGELVH

(53/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ADRSCAEEALRVLN






GTLLGGQNVRLSWG






RS





56
Eg/Eucgr.D01310.1
63%
291-363
KTVFVGGLDPNVTD
573
72%




(193/303)

DHLRQVFGQYGEIV

(53/73)






QVKIPPGKRCGFVQF






ADRSCAEEALRMLN






GTQLGGQNIRLSWG






RS





54
Pt/POPTR_0004s01690.1
61%
276-348
TTIFVGNLDSNVMD
572
72%




(213/349)

DHLKELFGQYGQLL

(53/73)






HVKIPAGKRCGFVQ






FADRSSAEEALKML






NGAQLSGQNIRLSW






GRN





44
Pt/POPTR_0001s45000.1
70%
267-339
TTIFVGALDPSVTDD
567
71%




(228/323)

TLRAVFSKYGELVH

(52/73)






VKIPAGKRCGFVQF






ANRTCAEQALSMLN






GTQIAGQNIRLSWG






RS





48
Sl/Solyc07g064510.2.1
67%
279-351
TTIFVGGLDPSVAEE
569
71%




(218/324)

HLRQVFSPYGELVH

(52/73)






VKIVAGKRCGFVQF






GSRASAEQALSSLN






GTQLGGQSIRLSWG






RS





68
Sl/Solyc10g005260.2.1
65%
274-346
TTIFVGNLDASVTDD
579
71%




(218/333)

HLRQVFGNYGQLLH

(52/73)






VKIPLGKRCGFVQFT






DRSCAEEALNALSG






TQLGGQTIRLSWGRS





52
At/AT1G11650.2
63%
261-333
TTVFVGGLDASVTD
571
69%




(206/325)

DHLKNVFSQYGEIV

(51/73)






HVKIPAGKRCGFVQ






FSEKSCAEEALRML






NGVQLGGTTVRLSW






GRS





26
Zm/GRMZM2G426591_T01
62%
315-387
TTIFVGGLDPNVTED
558
69%




(204/324)

MLKQVFTPYGDVV

(51/73)






HVKIPVGKRCGFVQ






YANRSSAEEALVILQ






GTLVGGQNVRLSW






GRS





24
Os/LOC_Os08g09100.1
63%
289-361
TTIFVGGLDPSVTDD
557
68%




(206/325)

MLKQVFTPYGDVV

(50/73)






HVKIPVGKRCGFVQ






FANRASADEALVLL






QGTLIGGQNVRLSW






GRS





16
Bd/Bradi5g22410.1
61%
284-356
TTIFVGGLDPNVTED
553
68%




(201/327)

ALKQVFAPYGEVIH

(50/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFVQF






VNRPSAEQALQMLQ






GTPIGGQNVRLSWG






RS





22
Bd/Bradi3g15180.1
56%
293-365
TTIFVGGLDPNVTED
556
68%




(213/376)

MLKQVFAPYGEVV

(50/73)






HVKIPVGKRCGFVQ






YASRSSSEEALLML






QGTVIGGQNVRLSW






GRS





30
Os/LOC_Os07g33330.1
58%
332-404
TTIFVGGLDSNVNED
560
64%




(205/348)

HLKQVFTPYGEIGY

(47/73)






VKIPLGKRCGFVQFT






SRSSAEEAIRVLNGS






QIGGQQVRLSWGRT





18
Zm/GRMZM2G012628_T01
58%
288-360
TTIFVGGLDPNVTED
554
64%




(191/329)

TLKQVFSPYGEVVH

(47/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFVQF






VTRPSAEQALLMLQ






GALIGAQNVRLSWG






RS





20
Zm/GRMZM2G058098_T02
58%
282-354
TTIFVGGLDPNVTED
555
64%




(192/331)

VLKQAFSPYGEVIH

(47/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFVQF






VTRPSAEQALLMLQ






GALIGAQNVRLSWG






RS





34
Zm/GRMZM2G169615_T01
55%
351-423
TTVFVGGLDSNVDE
562
58%




(188/338)

EYLRQIFTPYGEISY

(43/73)






VKIPVGKHCGFVQF






TSRSCAEEAIQMLN






GSQIGGQKARLSWG






RS





32
Zm/GRMZM2G127510_T01
53%
319-391
TTVFVGGLDSNVNE
561
58%




(191/354)

EYLRQIFTPYGEISY

(43/73)






VKIPVGKHCGFVQF






TSRSCAEEAIRMLNG






SQVGGQKVRLSWG






RS





28
Bd/Bradi1g26210.1
55%
320-392
TTIFVGGLDSNIDEN
559
57%




(181/324)

YLRQVFTPYGEVGY

(42/73)






VKIPVGKRCGFVQF






TSRSCAEEAINALNG






TPIGGNNVRLSWGRS









These functionally-related and/or closely-related RBP45A clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus first RRM domain (RRM1 domain) sequence, SEQ ID NO: 844:









X1LWIGDLQX9X10MX12X13X14X15X16X17X18X19X20X21X22





X23X24X25X26X27X28X29X30X31X32KX34IRX37KX39X40





X41X42X43X44GYGFX49EX51X52X53X54X55X56AEX59X60





LX62X63X64NX66X67X68X69X70X71X72X73X74X75X76





X77X78X79NWAX83X84X85







where X1=S or T; X9=any amino acid; X10=H or W; X12=D or E; X13=D or E; X14=any amino acid; X15=F or Y; X16=I, L, V or M; X17=H or absent; X18=any amino acid; X19=any amino acid; X20=any amino acid; X21=F, I, L, V or M; X22=any amino acid; X23=any amino acid; X24=any amino acid; X25=A or G; X26=P or absent; X27=Q or absent; X28=E or Q; X29=any amino acid; X30=any amino acid; X31=any amino acid; X32=any amino acid; X34=I, L, V or M; X37=N or D; X39=any amino acid; X40=any amino acid; X41=any amino acid; X42=any amino acid; X43=any amino acid; X44=E or Q; X49=I, L, V or M; X51=F, I, L, V or M; X52=any amino acid; X53=any amino acid; X54=H, Q or R; X55=A, S or G; X56=any amino acid; X59=any amino acid; X60=any amino acid; X62=any amino acid; X63=any amino acid; X64=F or Y; X66=any amino acid; X67=any amino acid; X68=any amino acid; X69=I, L, V or M; X70=any amino acid; X71=any amino acid; X72=any amino acid; X73=P or absent; X74=any amino acid; X75=any amino acid; X76=any amino acid; X77=F or Y; X78=K or R; X79=I, L, V or M; X83=any amino acid or absent; X84=any amino acid or absent; and X85=S or G.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related RBP45A clade polypeptides also may be identified by a consensus second RRM domain (RRM2 domain) sequence, SEQ ID NO: 845:









X1X2X3X4FX6GDLAX11X12VX14DX16X17LX19X20X21FX23X24





X25X26X27SX29X30X31AX33X34VX36DX38X39TX41X42X43





KGX46GFX49X50FX52X53X54X55EQX58X59AMX62EMX65GX67





X68X69SX71SX71RX73X74RX76GX78AX80







where X1=E or D; X2=any amino acid; X3=A or T; X4=I, L, V or M; X6=I, L, V or M; X11=any amino acid; X12=E or D; X14=any amino acid; X16=any amino acid; X17=I, L, V or M; X19=any amino acid; X20=E or D; X21=any amino acid; X23=K or R; X24=any amino acid; X25=any amino acid; X26=F or Y; X27=any amino acid; X29=any amino acid; X30=K or R; X31=S or G; X33=Nor K; X34=I, L, V or M; X36=any amino acid; X38=K or R; X39=any amino acid; X41=any amino acid; X42=any amino acid; X43=any amino acid; X46=F or Y; X49=I, L, V or M; X50=any amino acid; X52=A, S or G; X53=E or D; X54=any amino acid; X55=any amino acid; X58=any amino acid; X59=any amino acid; X62=any amino acid; X65=N or Q; X67=any amino acid; X68=any amino acid; X69=any amino acid; X71=S or T; X73=any amino acid; X74=I, L, V or M; X76=any amino acid; X78=any amino acid; and X80=A, S or T.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related RBP45A clade polypeptides also may be identified by a consensus third RRM domain (RRM3 domain) sequence, SEQ ID NO: 846:









X1TX3FVGX7X8DX10X11X12X13X14X15X16LX18X19X20FX22





X23X24GX26X27X28X29VKIX33X34GKX37CGFX41QX43X44





X45X46X47X48X49X50X51AX53X54X55LX57GX59X60X61





X62X63X64X65X66RLSWGRX73







where X1=any amino acid; X3=I, L, V or M; X7=any amino acid; X8=I, L, V or M; X10=any amino acid; X11=any amino acid; X12=I, L, V or M; X13=any amino acid; X14=E or D; X15=N, E or D; X16=any amino acid; X18=K or R; X19=any amino acid; X20=any amino acid; X22=any amino acid; X23=any amino acid; X24=F or Y; X26=E, Q or D; X27=I, L, V or M; X28=any amino acid; X29=any amino acid; X33=any amino acid; X34=any amino acid; X37=any amino acid; X41=I, L, V or M; X43=F or Y; X44=any amino acid; X45=any amino acid; X46=K or R; X47=any amino acid; X48=S or C; X49=A or S; X50=E or D; X51=any amino acid; X53=I, L, V or M; X54=any amino acid; X55=any amino acid; X57=any amino acid; X59=any amino acid; X60=any amino acid; X61=I, L, V or M; X62=S, A or G; X63=A or G; X64=any amino acid; X65=any amino acid; X66=any amino acid; and X73=any amino acid.


TCP6 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 7







Conserved ‘TCP domain’ of TCP6 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



TCP




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
TCP

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in

NO: of
TCP


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Col. 5
TCP
domain of


NO:
Identifier
TCP6
coordinates
Conserved TCP domain
domain
TCP6
















86
At/TCP6 or
100% 
64-125
KKKPNKDRHLKVEG
588
100% 



AT5G41030.1
(243/243)

RGRRVRLPPLCAARI

(62/62)






YQLTKELGHKSDGE






TLEWLLQHAEPSILS






ATVN





106
Sl/Solyc02g094290.1.1
76%
33-94 
KRKSNKDRHTKVEG
598
75%




(48/63)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(47/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQKAEPSIIA






ATGH





96
Gm/Glyma16g05840.1
48%
68-129
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
593
74%




 (67/138)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





84
At/AT3G27010.1
41%
74-135
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
587
74%




(128/311)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGS





94
Pt/POPTR_0017s09820.1
37%
83-144
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
592
74%




(113/300)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





88
Cc/clementine0.9_016144m
36%
66-127
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
589
74%




(114/312)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





90
Cc/clementine0.9_016174m
36%
66-127
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
590
74%




(114/312)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





92
Pt/POPTR_0001s33470.1
34%
78-139
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
591
74%




(115/332)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





98
Gm/Glyma19g26560.1
34%
68-129
KRSSNKDRHTKVEG
594
74%




(100/290)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(46/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





100
Cc/clementine0.9_018374m
38%
30-91 
KRSSNKDRHKKVDG
595
73%




 (95/245)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(45/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





104
Pt/POPTR_0003s16630.1
35%
60-121
KRSSNKDRHKKVEG
597
72%




 (99/280)

RGRRIRIPALCAARIF

(45/62)






QLTRELEHKSDGETI






QWLLQQAEPSIIAAT






GT





72
Bd/Bradi2g59240.1
39%
84-145
KRSSNKDRHTKVDG
581
70%




 (86/220)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62))






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TVQWLLQQAEPAIV






AATGS





74
Os/LOC_Os01g69980.1
39%
83-144
KRSSNKDRHTKVDG
582
70%




 (76/194)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TVQWLLQQAEPAIV






AATGT





78
Zm/GRMZM2G092214_T01
38%
98-159
KRSSNKDRHTKVDG
584
70%




 (85/218)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TVQWLLQQAEPAIV






AATGT





80
Zm/GRMZM2G092214_T02
38%
98-159
KRSSNKDRHTKVDG
585
70%




 (85/218)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62))






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TVQWLLQQAEPAIV






AATGT





76
Zm/GRMZM2G034638_T01
37%
88-149
KRSSNKDRHTKVDG
583
70%




 (82/216)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62)






FQLTRELGHKSDGE






TVQWLLQQAEPAIV






AATGT





102
Pt/POPTR_0001s13500.1
36%
60-121
KRSSNKDRHKKVDG
596
70%




 (85/236)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62)






FQLTRELGNKSDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIIA






ATGT





82
Eg/Eucgr.B03529.1
36%
40-101
KRSSNKDRHKKVDG
586
70%




(105/286)

RGRRIRMPALCAARI

(44/62)






FQLTRELGHKTDGE






TIQWLLQQAEPSIVA






ATGT









These functionally-related and/or closely-related TCP6 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus TCP domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 847:









KX2X3X4NKDRHX10KVX13GRGRRX19RX21PX23LCAARIX30





QLTX34ELX37X38KX40DGETX45X46WLLQX51AEPX55IX57X58





ATX61X62







where X2=K or R; X3=any amino acid; X4=S or P; X10=any amino acid; X13=D or E; X19=I, L, V or M; X21=I, L, V or M; X23=A or P; X30=F or Y; X34=K or R; X37=any amino acid; X38=H or N; X40=S or T; X45=I, L, V or M; X46=Q or E; X51=H, Q or K; X55=S or A; X57=I, L, V or M; X58=S or A; X61=any amino acid; and X62=any amino acid.


PIL1 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 8







Conserved ‘bHLH domain’ of PIL1 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



bHLH




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
bHLH

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
bHLH


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved bHLH
bHLH
domain of


NO:
Identifier
PIL1
coordinates
domain
domain
PIL1





108
At/PIL1 pr
100% 
227-283
RKRSIEVHKLYER
599
100% 



AT2G46970.1
(416/416)

KRRDEFNKKMRAL

(57/57)






QDLLPNCYKDDKA






SLLDEAIKYMRTLQ






LQVQ





112
Cc/clementine0.9_007946m
41%
309-365
KKRTPEVHKRYER
601
70%




 (96/231)

KRRDKINKKMRAL

(40/57)






QELIPNCNKVDKAS






VLEEAIDYLKTLQF






QVM





116
Pt/POPTR_0014s10700.1
40%
379-435
RRRATEIHNLSERK
603
70%




(104/254)

RRDRINKKMRALQ

(40/57)






DLIPNSNKVDKAS






MLGEAIDYLKSLQL






QVQ





114
Gm/Glyma10g27910.1
39%
187-243
RSRNAEVHNLCER
602
63%




(104/262)

KRRDKINKRMRILK

(36/57)






ELIPNCNKTDKASM






LDDAIEYLKTLKLQ






LQ





110
At/AT3G62090.2
43%
186-242
RKRNAEAYNSPER
600
61%




(173/399)

NQRNDINKKMRTL

(35/57)






QNLLPNSHKDDNE






SMLDEAINYMTNL






QLQVQ









These functionally-related and/or closely-related PIL1 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus bHLH domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 848:









X1X2RX4X5EX7X8X9X10X11ERX14X15RX17X18X19NRX22MRX25





LX27X28LX30PNX33X34RX36DX38X39SX41LX43X44AIX47YX49





X50X51LX53X54QX56X57







where X1=R or K; X2=any amino acid; X4=any amino acid; X5=any amino acid; X7=any amino acid; X8=H or Y; X9=N or K; X19=any amino acid; X11=any amino acid; X14=N or K; X15=any amino acid; X17=D or N; X18=any amino acid; X19=F, I, L, V or M; X22=R or K; X25=any amino acid; X27=Q or K; X28=N, D or E; X39=I, L, V or M; X11=S or C; X34=any amino acid; X36=any amino acid; X38=N or K; X39=any amino acid; X41=I, L, V or M; X43=any amino acid; X44=D or E; X47=any amino acid; X49=I, L, V or M; X50=any amino acid; X51=any amino acid; X53=Q or K; X54=F, I, L, V or M; X56=I, L, V or M; and X57=any amino acid.


PCL1 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 9







Conserved ‘SANT domain’ of PCL1 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



SANT




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
SANT

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
SANT


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved SANT
SANT
domain of


NO:
Identifier
PCL1
coordinates
domain
domain
PCL1





126
At/PCL1 or
100% 
146-196
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
608
100%



AT3G46640.3
(324/324)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





128
At/AT5G59570.1
63%
143-193
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
609
100%




(181/286)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





148
Gm/Glyma11g14490.1
62%
146-196
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
619
100%




(156/249)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





150
Gm/Glyma11g14490.2
62%
146-196
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
620
100%




(156/249)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





152
Gm/Glyma12g06410.1
60%
145-195
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
621
100%




(148/245)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





144
Sl/Solyc06g005680.2.1
59%
148-198
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
617
100%




(145/242)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





130
Cc/clementine0.9_013078m
58%

RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
610
100%




(146/251)
158-208
VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





132
Cc/clementine0.9_013095m
58%
158-208
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
611
100%




(146/251)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





134
Cc/clementine0.9_013088m
58%
158-208
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
612
100%




(146/251)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





136
Eg/Eucgr.B02313.1
53%
170-220
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
613
100%




(150/281)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





124
Si/Si002653m
47%
129-179
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
607
100%




(137/291)

VVAHLGIKNAVPKTI

(51/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





142
Pt/POPTR_0009s03990.2
56%
133-183
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
616
 98%




(167/297)

VVSHLGIKNAVPKTI

(50/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





154
Vv/GSVIVT01024916001
54%
233-283
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
622
 98%




(160/291)

VVGHLGIKNAVPKTI

(50/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





140
Pt/POPTR_0009s03990.1
53%
161-211
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
615
 98%




(170/315)

VVSHLGIKNAVPKTI

(50/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





120
Os/LOC_Os01g74020.1
55%
120-170
RLVWTPQLHKRFVE
605
 96%




(129/233)

VVAHLGMKNAVPK

(49/51)






TIMQLMNVEGLTRE






NVASHLQKYR





122
Zm/GRMZM2G067702_T01
51%
118-168
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
606
 96%




(118/229)

VVAHLGIKKAVPKTI

(49/51)






MELMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





146
Sl/Solyc06g076350.2.1
53%
152-202
RLVWTPQLHKRFIE
618
 94%




(129/241)

VVAHLGIKGAVPKTI

(48/51)






MQLMNVEGLTREN






VASHLQKYR





138
Pt/POPTR_0001s25040.1
50%
118-168
RLVWTPQLHKRFVD
614
 94%




(155/310)

VVGHLGMKNAVPK

(48/51)






TIMQWMNVEGLTRE






NVASHLQKYR





118
Bd/Bradi2g62067.1
47%
116-166
RMVWNPQLHKRFV
604
 94%




(142/301)

DVVAHLGIKSAVPK

(48/51)






TIMQLMNVEGLTRE






NVASHLQKYR









These functionally-related and/or closely-related PCL1 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus SANT domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 849:









RX2VWX5PQLHKRFX13X14VVX17HLGX21KX23AVPKTIMX31X32MN





VEGLTRENVASHLQKYR







where X2=I, L, V, or M; X5=any amino acid; X13=I, L, V, or M; X14=D or E; X17=A, S or G; X21=I, L, V, or M; X23=any amino acid; X31=Q or E; and X32=any amino acid.


GTL1 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 10







Conserved ‘Trihelix domain 1’ of GTL1 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








trihelix




Col. 3
Col. 4


domain 1




Percent
Trihelix

Col. 6
in Col. 5


Col. 1

identity of
domain 1

SEQ ID
to first


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5
NO: of
trihelix


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Conserved trihelix
trihelix
domain of


NO:
Identifier
GTL1
coordinates
domain 1
domain 1
GTL1





168
At/GTL1 or
100% 
60-143
GNRWPREETLALLRI
629
100% 



AT1G33240.1
(669/669)

RSDMDSTFRDATLK

(84/84)






APLWEHVSRKLLEL






GYKRSSKKCKEKFE






NVQKYYKRTKETRG






GRHDGKAYKFFSQ





156
At/GTL1 or
100% 
60-143
GNRWPREETLALLRI
623
100% 



G634
(152/152)

RSDMDSTFRDATLK

(84/84)






APLWEHVSRKLLEL






GYKRSSKKCKEKFE






NVQKYYKRTKETRG






GRHDGKAYKFFSQ





158
Bd/Bradi5g17150.1
72%
85-168
GNRWPREETLALIRI
624
82%




(66/91)

RSEMDATFRDATLK

(69/84)






GPLWEEVSRKLAEL






GYKRNAKKCKEKFE






NVHKYYKRTKEGRT






GRQDGKSYRFFSE





166
Pt/POPTR_0001s45870.1
75%
104-187 
GNRWPRQETLALLQ
628
80%




(70/93)

IRSEMDAAFRDATL

(68/84)






KGPLWEDVSRKLAE






MGYKRSAKKCKEK






FENVHKYYKRTKEG






RAGRQDGKSYRFFSQ





172
Gm/Glyma20g30640.1
68%
63-146
GNRWPRQETLALLR
631
77%




(73/107)

IRSDMDVAFRDASV

(65/84)






KGPLWEEVSRKMAE






LGYHRSSKKCKEKF






ENVYKYHKRTKEGR






SGKQDGKTYRFFDQ





186
Gm/Glyma20g30650.1
75%
66-149
GNRWPRQETLALLK
638
76%




(66/87)

IRSDMDAVFRDSSL

(64/84)






KGPLWEEVARKLSE






LGYHRSAKKCKEKF






ENVYKYHKRTKESR






SGKHEGKTYKFFDQ





162
Bd/Bradi3g30457.1
52%
86-169
GNRWPRQETLVLLK
626
76%




(143/275)

IRSDMDAAFRDATL

(64/84)






KGPLWEEVSRKLAE






EGYRRNAKKCKEKF






ENVHKYYKRTKDSR






AGRNDGKTYRFFQQ





164
Si/Si034382m
63%
74-157
GNRWPRQETLALLK
627
75%




 (74/116)

IRSEMDAAFREAAL

(63/84)






KGPLWEQVSRKLEA






MGYKRSAKKCREKF






ENVDKYYKRTKDG






RAGRGDGKAYRFFSE





160
Zm/GRMZM2G169580_T01
58%
98-181
GNRWPREETLALIRI
625
75%




 (80/136)

RTEMDADFRNAPLK

(63/84)






APLWEDVARKLAGL






GYHRSAKKCKEKFE






NVHKYYKRTKDAH






AGRQDGKSYRFFSQ





188
Pt/POPTR_0002s06900.1
71%
58-141
ANRWPRQETLALLK
639
73%




(68/95)

IRSDMDAVFRDSGL

(62/84)






KGPLWEEVSRKLAE






LGYHRSAKKCKEKF






ENVYKYHKRTKEGR






TGKSEGKSYKFFDE





184
Gm/Glyma16g28240.1
41%
53-136
GNRWPRQETLALLK
637
73%




(108/260)

IRSDMDTVFRDSSLK

(62/84)






GPLWEEVSRKLAEL






GYQRSAKKCKEKFE






NVYKYNKRTKDNK






SGKSHGKTYKFFDQ





190
Pt/POPTR_0005s21420.1
72%
61-144
ANRWPRQETLALLK
640
71%




(63/87)

IRSAMDAVFRDSSL

(60/84)






KGPLWEEVSRKLAE






LGYHRSAKKCKEKF






ENLYKYHKRTKEGR






TGKSEGKTYKFFDE





178
Pt/POPTR_0001s31660.1
70%
40-123
GNRWPKQETLALLK
634
71%




(64/91)

IRSDMDVAFKDSGL

(60/84)






KAPLWEEVSKKLNE






LGYNRSAKKCKEKF






ENIYKYHRRTKEGR






SGRPNGKTYRFFEQ





170
Pt/POPTR_0005s21410.1
44%
64-147
GSRWPRQETLALLKI
630
71%




(117/262)

RSGMDVAFRDASVK

(60/84)






GPLWEEVSRKLAEL






GYNRSGKKCKEKFE






NVYKYHKRTKDGR






TGKQEGKTYRFFDQ





176
Sl/Solyc12g056510.1.1
40%
70-153
GNRWPRQETLALLK
633
70%




(212/519)

IRSEMDVVFKDSSLK

(59/84)






GPLWEEVSRKLAEL






GYHRSAKKCKEKFE






NVYKYHRRTKDGR






ASKADGKTYRFFDQ





180
Pt/POPTR_0019s02650.1
69%
40-123
ANRWPKQETLALLE
635
69%




(64/92)

IRSDMDVAFRDSVV

(58/84)






KAPLWEEVSRKLNE






LGYNRSAKKCKEKF






ENIYKYHRRTKGSQ






SGRPNGKTYRFFEQ





174
Sl/Solyc04g071360.2.1
42%
58-141
GNRWPRQETIALLKI
632
69%




 (74/175)

RSEMDVIFRDSSLKG

(58/84)






PLWEEVSRKMADLG






FHRSSKKCKEKFEN






VYKYHKRTKDGRA






SKADGKNYRFFEQ





182
Sl/Solyc11g005380.1.1
69%
52-135
GNRWPHEETLALLK
636
66%




(64/92)

IRSEMDVAFRDSNL

(56/84)






KSPLWDEISRKMAE






LGYNRNAKKCREKF






ENIYKYHKRTKDGR






SGRQTGKNYRFFEQ
















TABLE 11







Conserved ‘Trihelix domain 2’ of GTL1 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








trihelix




Col. 3
Col. 4


domain 2




Percent
Trihelix

Col. 6
in Col. 5


Col. 1

identity of
domain 2

SEQ ID
to second


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5
NO: of
trihelix


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Conserved trihelix
trihelix
domain of


NO:
Identifier
GTL1
coordinates
domain 2
domain 2
GTL1





168
At/GTL1 or
100% 
433-517
SSRWPKAEILALINL
647
100% 



AT1G33240.1
(669/669)

RSGMEPRYQDNVPK

(85/85)






GLLWEEISTSMKRM






GYNRNAKRCKEKW






ENINKYYKKVKESN






KKRPQDAKTCPYFHR





156
At/GTL1 or
100% 
187-259
SSRWPKAEILALINL
641
82%



G634
(152/152)

RSGMEPRYQDNVPK

(70/85)






GLLWEEISTSMKRM






GYNRNAKRCKEKW






ENINKYYKKVKESN






NSN





166
Pt/POPTR_0001s45870.1
75%
520-604
SSRWPKPEVLALIKL
646
76%




(70/93)

RSGLETRYQEAGPK

(65/85)






GPLWEEISAGMLRL






GYKRSSKRCKEKWE






NINKYFKKVKESNK






KRTEDAKTCPYFHE





172
Gm/Glyma20g30640.1
68%
457-541
SSRWPKVEVQALIK
649
76%




 (73/107)

LRTSMDEKYQENGP

(65/85)






KGPLWEEISASMKK






LGYNRNAKRCKEK






WENINKYFKKVKES






NKRRPEDSKTCPYF






HQ





174
Sl/Solyc04g071360.2.1
42%
459-543
SSRWPKAEVEALIKL
650
76%




 (74/175)

RTNLDVKYQENGPK

(65/85)






GPLWEEISSGMKKIG






YNRNAKRCKEKWE






NINKYFKKVKESNK






KRPEDSKTCPYFHQ





158
Bd/Bradi5g17150.1
72%
496-580
SSRWPKTEVHALIQL
642
75%




(66/91)

RMDMDNRYQENGP

(64/85)






KGPLWEEISSGMRR






LGYNRNPKRCKEK






WENINKYFKKVKES






NKRRPEDSKTCPYF






HQ





162
Bd/Bradi3g30457.1
52%
453-537
SSRWPKAEVHALIQ
644
75%




(143/275)

LRSNLDTRYQEAGP

(64/85)






KGPLWEEISAGMRR






MGYSRSSKRCKEK






WENINKYFKKVKES






NKKRPEDSKTCPYF






HQ





176
Sl/Solyc12g056510.1.1
40%
455-539
SSRWPKEEIEALISLR
651
75%




(212/519)

TCLDLKYQENGPKG

(64/85)






PLWEEISSGMRKIGY






NRNAKRCKEKWENI






NKYFKKVKESNKKR






PEDSKTCPYFHQ





164
Si/Si034382m
63%
458-542
PSRWPKAEVHALIQ
645
74%




 (74/116)

LRTELEARYQDSGP

(63/85)






KGPLWEDISAGMRR






LGYNRSAKRCKEK






WENINKYFKKVKES






NKKRPEDSKTCPYY






HQ





188
Pt/POPTR_0002s06900.1
71%
405-489
SSRWPKVEVQALIN
657
70%




(68/95)

LRANLDVKYQENG

(60/85)






AKGPLWEDISAGMQ






KLGYNRSAKRCKEK






WENINKYFKKVKES






NKKRPEDSKTCPYF






DQ





182
Sl/Solyc11g005380.1.1
69%
363-448
SSRWPKAEVEALIKL
654
70%




(64/92)

RTNVDLQYQDNGSS

(61/86)






KGPLWEDISCGMKK






LGYDRNAKRCKEK






WENINKYYRRVKES






QKKRPEDSKTCPYF






HQ





180
Pt/POPTR_0019s02650.1
69%
331-415
SSRWPKEEIESLIKIR
653
70%




(64/92)

TYLEFQYQENGPKG

(60/85)






PLWEEISTSMKNLG






YDRSAKRCKEKWE






NMNKYFKRVKDSN






KKRPGDSKTCPYFQQ





170
Pt/POPTR_0005s21410.1
44%
404-488
PSRWPKVEVEALIRI
648
70%




(117/262)

RTNLDCKYQDNGPK

(60/85)






GPLWEEISARMRKL






GYNRNAKRCKEKW






ENINKYFKKVKESK






KKRPEDSKTCPYFQQ





186
Gm/Glyma20g30650.1
75%
442-526
SSRWPKTEVHALIRL
656
69%




(66/87)

RTSLEAKYQENGPK

(59/85)






APFWEDISAGMLRL






GYNRSAKRCKEKW






ENINKYFKKVKESN






KQRREDSKTCPYFHE





178
Pt/POPTR_0001s31660.1
70%
337-421
PSRWPKEEIEALIGL
652
69%




(64/91)

RTKLEFQYEENGPK

(59/85)






GPLWEEISASMKKL






GYDRSAKRCKEKW






ENMNKYFKRVKESN






KRRPGDSKTCPYFQQ





160
Zm/GRMZM2G169580_T01
58%
411-495
SSRWPKEEVEALIQV
643
68%




 (80/136)

RNEKDEQYHDAGG

(58/85)






KGPLWEDIAAGMRR






IGYNRSAKRCKEKW






ENINKYYKKVKESN






KRRPEDSKTCPYFHQ





190
Pt/POPTR_0005s21420.1
72%
406-490
SSRWPKVEVQALISL
658
67%




(63/87)

RADLDIKYQEHGAK

(57/85)






GPLWEDISAGMQKL






GYNRSAKRCKEKW






ENINKYFKKVKESN






RKRPGDSKTCPYFDQ





184
Gm/Glyma16g28240.1
41%
412-496
SSRWPKAEVHALIRI
655
67%




(108/260)

RTSLETKYQENGPK

(57/85)






APLWEDISIAMQRL






GYNRSAKRCKEKW






ENINKYFKRVRESSK






ERREDSKTCPYFHE









These functionally-related and/or closely-related GTL1 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus first Trihelix domain sequence (Trihelix 1), SEQ ID NO: 850:









X1X2RWPX6X7ETX10X11LX13X14IRX17X18MDX21X22FX24X25





X26X27X28KX30PLWX34X35X36X37X38KX40X41X42X43GX45





X46RX48X49KKCX53EKFENX59X60KYX63X64RTKX68X69X70X71





X72X73X74X75GKX78YX80FFX83X84







where X1=A or G; X2=any amino acid; X6=any amino acid; X7=Q or E; X10=I, L, V or M; X11=any amino acid; X13=I, L, V or M; X14=any amino acid; X17=S or T; X18=any amino acid; X21=any amino acid; X22=any amino acid; X24=R or K; X25=N, D or E; X26=A or S; X27=any amino acid; X28=I, L, V or M; X30=A, S or G; X34=D or E; X35=any amino acid; X36=I, L, V or M; X37=A or S; X38=R or K; X40=I, L, V or M; X41=any amino acid; X42=any amino acid; X43=any amino acid; X45=F or Y; X46=H, Q, N, R or K; X48=any amino acid; X49=A, S or G; X53=K or R; X59=I, L, V or M; X60=any amino acid; X63=any amino acid; X64=K or R; X68=any amino acid; X69=any amino acid; X70=H, Q, K or, R; X71=any amino acid; X72=S or G; X73=R or K; X74=any amino acid; X75=any amino acid; X78=any amino acid; X80=R or K; X83=any amino acid; and X84=Q or E.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related GTL1 clade polypeptides may also be identified by a consensus first Trihelix domain sequence (Trihelix 2), SEQ ID NO: 851:









X1SRWPKX7EX9X10X11LIX14X15X17X18X19X20X21X22YX24





X25X26X27X28X29KX31X32X33WEX36IX38X39X40MX42X43X44





GYX47RX49X50KRCKEKWENX60NKYX64X65X66VX68X69SX71X72





X73X74X75X76X77X78X79X80X81X82X83X84X85X86







where X1=S or P; X7=any amino acid; X9=I, L, V or M; X10=any amino acid; X11=A or S; X14=any amino acid; X15=I, L, V or M; X17=any amino acid; X18=any amino acid; X19=any amino acid; X20=E or D; X21=any amino acid; X22=K, Q or R; X24=any amino acid; X25=E or D; X26=any amino acid; X27=any amino acid; X28=S or absent; X29=any amino acid; X31=A or G; X32=any amino acid; X33=F or L; X36=E or D; X38=A or S; X39=any amino acid; X40=any amino acid; X42=any amino acid; X43=N, K or R; X44=L, V or M; X47=any amino acid; X49=any amino acid; X50=A, S or P; X60=I, L, V or M; X64=F or Y; X65=K or R; X66=K or R; X68=K or R; X69=E or D; X71=any amino acid; X72=N, K or R; X73=any amino acid; X74=N or R; X75=any amino acid or absent; X76=any amino acid or absent; X77=D or absent; X78=S, A or absent; X79=K or absent; X80=T or absent; X81=C or absent; X82=P or absent; X83=Y or absent; X84=F, Y or absent; X85=H, Q, D or absent; X86=any amino acid or absent.


DREB2H Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 12







Conserved ‘AP2 domain’ of DREB2H and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



AP2




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
AP2

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in

NO: of
AP2


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Col. 5
AP2
domain of


NO:
Identifier
DREB2H
coordinates
Conserved AP2 domain
domain
DREB2H





218
At/DREB2H or
100% 
65-122
CDYTGVRQRTWGK
672
100% 



AT2G40350.1
(157/157) 

WVAEIREPGRGAKL

(58/58)






WLGTFSSSYEAALA






YDEASKAIYGQSAR






LNL





192
At/G1755
100% 
72-129
CDYTGVRQRTWGK
659
100% 




(155/155) 

WVAEIREPGRGAKL

(58/58)






WLGTFSSSYEAALA






YDEASKAIYGQSAR






LNL





216
At/AT2G40340.1
86%
70-127
CDYRGVRQRRWGK
671
89%




(108/125) 

WVAEIREPDGGARL

(52/58)






WLGTFSSSYEAALA






YDEAAKAIYGQSAR






LNL





232
Sl/Solyc05g052410.1.1
65%
72-129
CKYRGVRQRTWGK
679
75%




(82/125)

WVAEIREPHRGRRL

(44/58)






WLGTFDTAIEAALA






YDEAARAMYGPCA






RLNL





230
Pt/POPTR_0010s19100.1
65%
78-135
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
678
75%




(79/121)

WVAEIREPNRGPRL

(44/58)






WLGTFPTAYEAALA






YDEAARAMYGPYA






RLNV





226
Gm/Glyma14g06080.1
64%
78-135
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
676
75%




(80/125)

WVGEIREPNRGSRL

(44/58)






WLGTFSSAQEAALA






YDEAARAMYGPCA






RLNF





224
Gm/Glyma02g42960.1
62%
78-135
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
675
75%




(79/127)

WVGEIREPNRGSRL

(44/58)






WLGTFSSAQEAALA






YDEAARAMYGPCA






RLNF





228
Pt/POPTR_0008s07360.1
65%
78-135
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
677
74%




(79/121)

WVAEIREPNRGPRL

(43/58)






WLGTFPTAYEAALA






YDNAARAMYGSCA






RLNI





234
Sl/Solyc06g050520.1.1
63%
80-137
CKYRGVRQRIWGK
680
72%




(79/125)

WVAEIREPKRGSRL

(42/58)






WLGTFGTAIEAALA






YDDAARAMYGPCA






RLNL





214
Gm/Glyma13g38030.1
61%
63-120
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
670
72%




(76/123)

WVAEIREPNRGNRL

(42/58)






WLGTFPTAIGAALA






YDEAARAMYGSCA






RLNF





208
Gm/Glyma06g45680.1
61%
65-122
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
667
72%




(72/118)

WVAEIREPNRGSRL

(42/58)






WLGTFPTAISAALA






YDEAARAMYGSCA






RLNF





212
Gm/Glyma12g32400.1
60%
63-120
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
669
72%




(75/123)

WVAEIREPNRGNRL

(42/58)






WLGTFPTAIGAALA






YDEAARAMYGSCA






RLNF





210
Gm/Glyma12g11150.1
60%
65-122
CNYRGVRQRTWGK
668
72%




(72/119)

WVAEIREPNRGSRL

(42/58)






WLGTFPTAISAALA






YDEAAMAMYGFCA






RLNF





206
Eg/Eucgr.G03094.1
61%
69-126
FNYRGVRQRTWGK
666
70%




(74/121)

WVAEIREPNRGSRL

(41/58)






WLGTFPTAIEAAKA






YDEAATAMYGPCA






RLNF





198
Si/Si002067m
60%
167-224 
CPYRGVRQRTWGK
662
70




(72/120)

WVAEIREPNRGKRL

(41/58)






WLGSFPTAVEAAHA






YDEAAKAMYGPKA






RVNF





194
Bd/Bradi2g04000.1
56%
76-133
CAYRGVRQRTWGK
660
68%




(67/119)

WVAEIREPNRGKRL

(40/58)






WLGSFPTAVEAAHA






YDEAARAMYGAKA






RVNF





196
Os/LOC_Os01g07120.1
55%
81-138
CAYRGVRQRTWGK
661
68%




(66/119)

WVAEIREPNRGRRL

(40/58)






WLGSFPTALEAAHA






YDEAARAMYGPTA






RVNF





202
Si/Si022619m
58%
83-140
CGYRGVRQRTWGK
664
65%




(73/125)

WVAEIREPNRANRL

(38/58)






WLGTFPTAEDAARA






YDQAARAMYGEVA






RTNF





204
Si/Si022621m
58%
82-139
CGYRGVRQRTWGK
665
65%




(73/125)

WVAEIREPNRANRL

(38/58)






WLGTFPTAEDAARA






YDQAARAMYGEVA






RTNF





200
Bd/Bradi2g29960.1
56%
130-187 
CKFRGVRQRTWGK
663
65%




(70/123)

WVAEIREPNRVSRL

(38/58)






WLGTFPTAETAACA






YDEAARAMYGPLA






RTNF





220
Gm/Glyma07g19220.1
57%
65-129
CKFRGVRQRIWGK
673
63%




(73/128)

WVAEIREPINGKLV

(41/65)






GEKANRLWLGTFST






ALEAALAYDEAAKA






MYGPCARLNF





222
Gm/Glyma18g43750.1
57%
65-129
CKFRGVRQRIWGK
674
63%




(73/127)

WVAEIREPINGKLV

(41/65)






GEKANRLWLGTFST






ALEAALAYDEAAKA






LYGPCARLNF









These functionally-related and/or closely-related DREB2H clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus AP2 domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 852:









X1X2X3GVRQRX9WGKWVX15EIREPX21X22X23X24X25X26X27





X28X29X30X31X32LWLGX37FX39X40X41X42X43AAX46AYDX50





AX52X53AX55YGX58X59ARX62NX64







where X1=any amino acid; X2=F or Y; X3=any amino acid; X9=any amino acid; X15=A or G; X21=I or absent; X22=Nor absent; X23=G or absent; X24=K or absent; X25=L or absent; X26=V or absent; X27=G or absent; X28=any amino acid; X29=any amino acid; X39=any amino acid; X31=any amino acid; X32=R or K; X37=S or T; X39=any amino acid; X49=S or T; X41=A or S; X42=any amino acid; X43=any amino acid; X46=any amino acid; X59=Q, D, N or E; X52=A or S; X53=any amino acid; X55=I, L, V or M; X58=any amino acid; X59=any amino acid; X62=any amino acid; and X64=F, I, L, V or M


ERF087 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 13







Conserved ‘AP2 domain’ of ERF087 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



AP2




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
AP2

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in

NO: of
AP2


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Col. 5
AP2
domain of


NO:
Identifier
ERF087
coordinates
Conserved AP2 domain
domain
ERF087





246
At/ERF087 or
100% 
 38-101
KYVGVRRRPWGRY
686
100% 



AT1G28160.1
(245/245)

AAEIRNPTTKERYW

(64/64)






LGTFDTAEEAALAY






DRAARSIRGLTART






NFVYSDMPR





254
At/AT5G13910.1
83%
19-82
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
690
85%




(64/77)

AEIRDPTTKERHWL

(55/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGTRARTN






FVYSDMPP





248
Eg/Eucgr.B03565.1
47%
 46-109
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
687
85%




(104/221)

AEIRDPTTKERHWL

(55/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGAKART






NFVYSDMPP





266
Vv/GSVIVT01032961001
84%
21-84
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
696
84%




(65/77)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(54/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGSRARTN






FVYSDMPP





256
Pt/POPTR_0001s15710.1
81%
25-88
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
691
84%




(64/79)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(54/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGSRARTN






FVYSDMPA





258
Pt/POPTR_0003s07540.1
81%
25-88
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
692
84%




(64/79)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(54/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGPRARTN






FVYSDMPA





252
Pt/POPTR_0003s15940.1
70%
 39-102
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
689
84%




 (84/120)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(54/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGSKARTN






FVYSDMPP





250
Pt/POPTR_0001s12820.1
45%
 37-100
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
688
84%




(109/240)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(54/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGSKARTN






FVYSDMPP





262
Gm/Glyma02g07460.1
72%
31-94
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
694
82%




(69/95)

AAEIRDPSTKERHW

(53/64)






LGTFDTAEEAALAY






DRAARSMRGSRART






NFVYPDTPP





260
Eg/Eucgr.I01576.1
51%
27-90
RFLGVRRRPWGRYA
693
82%




 (81/157)

AEIRDPSTKERHWL

(53/64)






GTFDTAEEAALAYD






RAARSMRGSRARTN






FVYSDLPA





238
Os/LOC_Os02g32040.1
75%
 39-102
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
682
79%




(60/79)

AAEIRDPATKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAAVAY






DRAARTIRGAAART






NFAYPDLPP





264
Gm/Glyma16g26460.1
70%
31-94
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
695
79%




(67/95)

AAEIRDPSTKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAALAY






DKAARSMRGSRART






NFIYPDTPP





240
Os/LOC_Os04g32790.1
69%
 51-114
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
683
79%




(62/89)

AAEIRDPATKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAAVAY






DRAARSLRGARART






NFAYPDLPP





242
Zm/GRMZM2G023708_T01
69%
 41-104
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
684
79%




(62/89)

AAEIRDPATKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAAVAY






DRAARSLRGARART






NFAYPDLPP





236
Zm/GRMZM2G047999_T01
64%
 73-136
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
681
79%




 (73/114)

AAEIRDPATKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAAIAY






DRAARNIRGANART






NFAYPDLPP





244
Zm/GRMZM2G079825_T01
63%
 37-100
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
685
79%




 (73/115)

AAEIRDPATKERHW

(51/64)






LGTFDTAEEAAVAY






DRAARSLRGARART






NFAYPDLPP





268
Gm/Glyma16g05070.1
49%
14-77
RYLGVRRRPWGRY
697
78%




 (74/150)

AAEIRDPSTKERHW

(50/64)






LGTFDTADEAALAY






DRAARAMRGSRAR






TNFVYADTTP









These functionally-related and/or closely-related ERF087 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus AP2 domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 853:









X1X2X3GVRRRPWGRYAAEIRX19PX21TKERX26WLGTFDTAX35





EAAX39AYDX43AARX47X48RGX51X52ARTNFX58YX60DX62X63





X64







where X1=K or R; X2=F or Y; X3=I, L, V or M; X19=N or D; X21=A, S or T; X26=H or Y; X35=D or E; X39=I, L, V or M; X43=R or K; X47=any amino acid; X48=I, L, V or M; X51=any amino acid; X52=any amino acid; X58=any amino acid; X60=S, A or P; X62=any amino acid; X63=T or P; and X64=any amino acid.


BBX18 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 14







Conserved first ‘BBX domain’ of BBX18 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3
Col. 4


first BBX




Percent
BBX

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
domain 1

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5
NO: of
first BBX


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Conserved BBX
BBX
domain of


NO:
Identifier
BBX18
coordinates
domain 1
domain 1
BBX18





278
At/BBX18 or
100% 
5-42
CDACESAAAIVFCA
702
100% 



AT2G21320.1
(172/172)

ADEAALCCSCDEKV

(38/38)






HKCNKLASRH





290
Pt/POPTR_0007s13830.1
61%
5-42
CDACESAAAIVFCA
708
92%




(114/184)

ADEAALCLACDEKV

(35/38)






HMCNKLASRH





284
Gm/Glyma01g37370.1
60%
5-42
CDACESAAAIVFCA
705
92%




(111/183)

ADEAALCRACDEKV

(35/38)






HMCNKLASRH





286
Gm/Glyma11g07930.1
59%
5-42
CDACESAAAIVFCA
706
92%




(112/189)

ADEAALCRACDEKV

(35/38)






HMCNKLASRH





296
Pt/POPTR_0004s16950.1
60%
5-42
CDVCESAAAILFCA
711
89%




(111/184)

ADEAALCRSCDEKV

(34/38)






HMCNKLASRH





298
Pt/POPTR_0009s12730.1
60%
5-42
CDVCESAAAILFCA
712
89%




(111/184)

ADEAALCRSCDEKV

(34/38)






HLCNKLASRH





300
Vv/GSVIVT01024173001
59%
5-42
CDACESAAAILFCA
713
89%




(117/198)

ADEAALCRACDEKV

(34/38)






HMCNKLASRH





302
Sl/Solyc01g110370.2.1
58%
5-42
CDVCESAAAILFCA
714
89%




(114/196)

ADEAALCRSCDEKV

(34/38)






HLCNKLASRH





280
At/AT4G38960.1
76%
5-42
CDACENAAAIIFCAA
703
86%




(131/171)

DEAALCRPCDEKVH

(33/38)






MCNKLASRH





288
Pt/POPTR_0005s11900.1
61%
5-42
CDACESAFAIVFCAA
707
86%




(114/184)

DEAALCLACDKKVH

(33/38)






MCNKLASRH





292
Vv/GSVIVT01018818001
60%
5-42
CDVCESAAAILFCA
709
86%




(110/183)

ADEAALCRVCDEKV

(33/38)






HMCNKLASRH





282
Eg/Eucgr.I02368.1
57%
5-42
CDACESAAAVVFCA
704
86%




(107/185)

ADEAALCSACDDKV

(33/38)






HMCNKLASRH





306
Gm/Glyma12g04130.1
63%
5-42
CDVCESAAAIVFCA
716
84%




(110/172)

ADEAALCSACDHKI

(32/38)






HMCNKLASRH





294
Eg/Eucgr.I01328.1
57%
5-42
CDVCENAAAIFFCA
710
84%




(111/193)

ADEAALCRACDEKV

(32/38)






HLCNKLASRH





270
Bd/Bradi4g35950.1
55%
5-42
CDVCESAVAVLFCA
698
84%




(108/196)

ADEAALCRSCDEKV

(32/38)






HLCNKLASRH





274
Zm/GRMZM2G143718_T01
57%
5-42
CDVCESAPAVLFCA
700
81%




(109/191)

ADEAALCRPCDEKV

(31/38)






HMCNKLASRH





276
Zm/GRMZM2G422644_T01
57%
5-42
CDVCESAPAVLFCA
701
81%




(109/190)

ADEAALCRPCDEKV

(31/38)






HMCNKLASRH





304
Gm/Glyma11g11850.1
57%
5-42
CDVCESAAAILFCA
715
81%




(112/196)

ADEAALCSACDHKI

(31/38)






HMCNKLASRH





272
Os/LOC_Os09g35880.1
57%
5-42
CDVCESAPAVLFCV
699
78%




(113/197)

ADEAALCRSCDEKV

(30/38)






HMCNKLARRH
















TABLE 15







Conserved second ‘BBX domain’ of BBX18 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








second








BBX




Col. 3
Col. 4


domain in




Percent
BBX

Col. 6
Col. 5 to


Col. 1

identity of
domain 2

SEQ ID
second


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5
NO: of
BBX


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
Conserved BBX
BBX
domain of


NO:
Identifier
BBX18
coordinates
domain 2
domain 2
BBX18





278
At/BBX18 or
100% 
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
721
100% 



AT2G21320.1
(172/172)

DGSSLCLQCDMVVH

(36/36)






VGGKRTH





280
At/AT4G38960.1
76%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
722
100% 




(131/171)

DGSSLCLQCDMVVH

(36/36)






VGGKRTH





306
Gm/Glyma12g04130.1
63%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
735
97%




(110/172)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(35/36)






VGGKRTH





298
Pt/POPTR_0009s12730.1
60%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
731
97%




(111/184)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(35/36)






VGGKRTH





302
Sl/Solyc01g110370.2.1
58%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
733
97%




(114/196)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(35/36)






VGGKRTH





294
Eg/Eucgr.I01328.1
57%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
729
97%




(111/193)

DGSSLCLQCDMLVH

(35/36)






VGGKRTH





304
Gm/Glyma11g11850.1
57%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
734
97%




(112/196)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(35/36)






VGGKRTH





288
Pt/POPTR_0005s11900.1
61%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCET
726
94%




(114/184)

DGSSLCLQCDMTVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





290
Pt/POPTR_0007s13830.1
61%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCET
727
94%




(114/184)

DGSSLCLQCDMTVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





296
Pt/POPTR_0004s16950.1
60%
56-91
CDICEKAPAFFYCEI
730
94%




(111/184)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





284
Gm/Glyma01g37370.1
60%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCET
724
94%




(111/183)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





292
Vv/GSVIVT01018818001
60%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
728
94%




(110/183)

DGTSLCLQCDMIVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





286
Gm/Glyma11g07930.1
59%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCET
725
94%




(112/189)

DGSSLCLQCDMIVH

(34/36)






VGGKRTH





300
Vv/GSVIVT01024173001
59%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEV
732
91%




(117/198)

DGTSLCLQCDMIVH

(33/36)






VGGKRTH





272
Os/LOC_Os09g35880.1
57%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEI
718
91%




(113/197)

DGTSLCLSCDMTVH

(33/36)






VGGKRTH





282
Eg/Eucgr.I02368.1
57%
56-91
CDICENAPAFFYCEV
723
91%




(107/185)

DGTSLCLQCDMIVH

(33/36)






VGGKRTH





274
Zm/GRMZM2G143718_T01
57%
56-91
CDICENSPAFFYCEI
719
88%




(109/191)

DGTSLCLSCDMTVH

(32/36)






VGGKRTH





276
Zm/GRMZM2G422644_T01
57%
56-91
CDICENSPAFFYCEI
720
88%




(109/190)

DGTSLCLSCDMTVH

(32/36)






VGGKRTH





270
Bd/Bradi4g35950.1
55%
56-91
CDICENSPAFFYCDI
717
86%




(108/196)

DGTSLCLSCDMAVH

(31/36)






VGGKRTH









These functionally-related and/or closely-related BBX18 clade polypeptides may be identified by a first consensus BBX domain sequence (BBX1), SEQ ID NO: 854:









CDX3CEX6AX8AX10FCX14ADEAALCX22X23CDX26KX28HX30CNKL





AX36RH







where X3=any amino acid; X6=any amino acid; X8=any amino acid; X10=I, L, V or M; X11=F, I, L, V or M; X14=any amino acid; X22=any amino acid; X23=any amino acid; X26=any amino acid; X28=I, L, V or M; X30=any amino acid; and X36=any amino acid.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related BBX18 clade polypeptides may also be identified by a second consensus BBX domain sequence (BBX2), SEQ ID NO: 855:









CDICEX67X7PAFFYCX14X15DGX18SSCLX23CDMX27VHVGGKRTH







X6=N or K; X7=S or A; X14=D or E; X15=T, I, L, V or M; X11=S or T; X23=I, L, V or M; and X23=I, L, V or M.


bHLH60 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 16







Conserved ‘bHLH domain’ of bHLH60 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



bHLH




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
bHLH

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
bHLH


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved bHLH
bHLH
domain of


NO:
Identifier
bHLH60
coordinates
domain
domain
bHLH60





318
At/bHLH60 or
100% 
208-265
RGQATDSHSLAER
741
100% 



AT3G57800.2
(379/379)

ARREKINARMKLL

(58/58)






QELVPGCDKIQGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





316
At/AT2G42300.1
68%
189-246
RGQATDNHSLAER
740
96%




(261/380)

ARREKINARMKLL

(56/58)






QELVPGCDKIQGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





330
Cc/clementine0.9_015567m
55%
242-299
RGQATDSHSLAER
747
96%




(178/321)

ARREKINARMKLL

(56/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





322
Gm/Glyma03g29710.1
53%
210-267
RGQATDSHSLAER
743
96%




(190/352)

ARREKINARMKLL

(56/58)






QELVPGCDKISGTA






MVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





324
Gm/Glyma19g32570.1
52%
204-261
RGQATDSHSLAER
744
96%




(203/388)

ARREKINARMKLL

(56/58)






QELVPGCDKISGTA






MVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





328
Cc/clementine0.9_011877m
51%
242-299
RGQATDSHSLAER
746
96%




(214/418)

ARREKINARMKLL

(56/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





334
Vv/GSVIVT01033350001
55%
201-258
RGQATDSHSLAER
749
94%




(218/396)

ARREKINARMKLL

(55/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






LVLDEIISHVQSLQR






QVE





320
Eg/Eucgr.A02413.1
52%
185-242
RGQATDSHSLAER
742
94%




(179/338)

ARREKINARMKLL

(55/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






SVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





336
Sl/Solyc10g079070.1.1
47%
198-255
RGQATDSHSLAER
750
94%




(163/342)

ARREKINARMKLL

(55/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






MVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





332
Pt/POPTR_0006s05600.1
53%
181-238
RGQATDSHSLAER
748
93%




(188/354)

ARREKINQRMKLL

(54/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






CQVE





326
Gm/Glyma10g12210.1
46%
196-253
RGQATDSHSLAER
745
91%




(179/386)

ARREKINARMKLL

(53/58)






QELVPGCNKISGTA






LVLDKIINHVQSLQ






NEVE





310
Zm/GRMZM2G074438_T01
43%
161-218
RGQATDSHSLAER
737
91%




(134/309)

ARREKINARMELL

(53/58)






KELVPGCSKVSGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





314
Si/Si006781m
43%
177-234
RGQATDSHSLAER
739
91%




(132/307)

ARREKINARMELL

(53/58)






KELVPGCSKVSGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





312
Zm/GRMZM2G378653_T01
43%
184-241
RGQATDSHSLAER
738
91%




(135/309)

ARREKINARMELL

(53/58)






KELVPGCSKVSGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE





308
Bd/Bradi1g35990.1
42%
145-202
RGQATDSHSLAER
736
91%




(147/348)

ARREKINARMELL

(53/58)






KELVPGCSKVSGTA






LVLDEIINHVQSLQ






RQVE









These functionally-related and/or closely-related bHLH60 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus bHLH domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 856:









RGQATDX7HSLAERARREKINX21RMX24LLX27ELVPGCX34KX36X37





GTAX41VLDX45IIX48HVQX52LQX55X56VE







where X7=any amino acid; X21=any amino acid; X24=K or E; X27=Q or K; X34=any amino acid; X36=I, L, V or M; X37=any amino acid; X41=any amino acid; X45=K or E; X48=any amino acid; X52=S or T; X55=any amino acid; and X56=Q or E.


NF-YC6 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 17







Conserved ‘NF-Y/histone-like domain’ of NF-YC6 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








NF-








Y/histone-








like





Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in




Col. 3
NF-

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to




Percent
Y/histone-

NO: of
NF-


Col. 1

identity of
like domain

NF-
Y/histone-


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
in amino
Col. 5 Conserved
Y/histone-
like


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
acid
NF-Y/histone-like
like
domain of


NO:
Identifier
NF-YC6
coordinates
domain
domain
NF-YC6





356
At/NF-YC6 or
100% 
53-117
RQLPLARIKKIMKA
760
100% 



AT5G50480.1
(202/202) 

DPDVHMVSAEAPII

(65/65)






FAKACEMFIVDLT






MRSWLKAEENKRH






TLQKSDISNAV





348
Si/Si015775m
55%
55-119
HSLPLARIKKIMKA
756
67%




(57/103)

DEDVKMIAAEAPV

(44/65)






VFAKACEMFILELT






LRSWLHTEGTKRR






TMQRSDVSAAI





350
At/AT5G27910.1
54%
35-99 
HDLPITRIKKIMKY
757
67%




(92/168)

DPDVTMIASEAPIL

(44/65)






LSKACEMFIMDLT






MRSWLHAQESKRV






TLQKSNVDAAV





338
Bd/Bradi3g17790.1
52%
77-141
HSLPLARIKKIMKA
751
67%




(55/105)

DEDVQMIAGEAPA

(44/65)






VFAKACEMFILELT






LRSWLQTRENNRN






TLQKNDIATVV





346
Os/LOC_Os08g10560.1
47%
380-444 
PNLPLARIKKIMKA
755
63%




(59/125)

DEDVKMIAGEAPA

(41/65)






LFAKACEMFILDMT






LRSWQHTEEGRRR






TLQRSDVEAVI





340
Bd/Bradi3g17800.1
48%
240-305 
HSLPLARIKKIMKA
752
60%




(56/116)

SGENVQMIAGEAH

(40/66)






GLLAKACEIFIQELT






LRSWLQTRENNRR






TLQKNDIAAAV





344
Bd/Bradi3g17810.1
51%
99-164
HSLPLARIKKIMKA
754
59%




(51/100)

SGEDIRMIASEAPG

(39/66)






LLAKASEIFIQELTL






RSWLETRDNNRRT






LQKNDIGAAV





352
At/AT5G50490.1
45%
35-99 
HEFPISRIKRIMKFD
758
58%




(78/172)

PDVSMIAAEAPNLL

(38/65)






SKACEMFVMDLTM






RSWLHAQESNRLTI






RKSDVDAVV





368
Sl/SolycO3g111460.1.1
43%
64-128
HSLPISRIKKIMKSD
766
58%




(69/158)

KEVRMISAESPILLA

(38/65)






KACELFIQELTHRS






WLKAQECQRQTLK






KIDLFTVL





342
Bd/Bradi3g17820.1
52%
7-72
HSLPLERIKKIMKA
753
56%




(45/85) 

SGENVQVIAGEAPG

(37/66)






VLTKACEIFIQELTL






RSWLQTREKNRRT






LQKNDIAAAV





370
Sl/SolycO3g111470.1.1
48%
74-138
HSLPIFRIKKIMKSD
767
56%




(45/92) 

KEVRMISAESPILLD

(37/65)






KACELFIQELTHRS






WLKAQECQRRTLK






KIDFFTTE





354
At/AT5G50470.1
48%
62-132
HAFPLTRIKKIMKS
759
56%




(92/189)

NPEVNMVTAEAPV

(40/71)






LISKACEMLILDLT






MRSWLHTVEGGRQ






TLKRSDTLTRSDIS






AAT





362
Sl/Solyc03g110840.1.1
49%
52-117
RLLLPPTRIKKIMK
763
53%




(51/104)

KNEDVRMVAGESP

(35/66)






VLLAKACELFIQDL






TLRSSIHAQENHRRI






LKKDDLTDVI





364
Sl/Solyc03g110850.1.1
46%
53-118
NLLPRIHRIKKIMKT
764
53%




(54/116)

DKDVRMIATESPVL

(35/66)






LAKACELFIQELTL






RSWFKAEENHRRIL






KKDDVTDVI





366
Sl/Solyc11g016920.1.1
45%
53-118
NLLPSINRIKKIMKT
765
50%




(53/116)

DKDVRMIATESPVL

(33/66)






LAKACELFIQELTL






RSWFKTEKNHRRIL






KKDDVTDVI





360
Sl/Solyc02g021330.1.1
40%
54-119
NHLLPPNLIKKLMK
762
46%




(55/137)

TDEDDQMIAAESPV

(31/66)






LLAKTCELFIQELTL






RSWLNAQEKHQHI






LKKDDVTDVI





358
Sl/Solyc00g107050.1.1
42%
55-120
NLLVSPNRIKNIMK
761
45%




(40/94) 

TNKDVRRITSESPV

(30/66)






LLAKACDFFIQELT






LRSWLNAQENHRR






ILKKKDVTDVI





372
Sl/Solyc03g111450.1.1
40%
102-166 
HHFPISRIKRIIKSEN
768
44%




(69/171)

NAIKLSAETPILFSK

(29/65)






ACELFVLELTLRSW






FHAQQNNRGSLKK






TDFAAAI









These functionally-related and/or closely-related NF-YC6 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus NF-Y/histone-like domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 857:









X1X2X3X4X5X6X7X8IKX11X12X13KX15X16X17X18X19X20X21





X22X23X24X25EX27X28X29X30X31X32KX34X35X36X37X38X39





X40X41X42TX44RSX47X48X49X50X51X52X53X54X55X56X57





X58X59X60X61X62X63X64X65X66X67X68X69X70X71X72X73







where X1=any amino acid; X2=any amino acid; X3=F, I, L, V or M; X4=any amino acid or absent; X5=any amino acid; X6=any amino acid; X7=any amino acid; X8=any amino acid; X11=N, K or R; X12=I, L, V or M; X13=I, L, V or M; X15=any amino acid; X16=any amino acid; X17=G or absent; X18=any amino acid; X19=N, E or D; X20=any amino acid; X21=any amino acid; X22=any amino acid; X23=I, L, V or M; X24=A or T; X25=A, S, T or G; X27=A, S or T; X28=any amino acid; X29=any amino acid; X39=I, L, V or M; X31=F, I, L, V or M; X32=any amino acid; X34=any amino acid; X35=S or C; X36=E or D; X37=F, I, L, V or M; X38=I, L, V or M; X39=I, L, V or M; X49 any amino acid; X41=E or D; X42=I, L, V or M; X44=any amino acid; X47=any amino acid; X48=any amino acid; X49=any amino acid; X50=A or T; X51=any amino acid; X52=any amino acid; X53=any amino acid; X54=any amino acid; X55=Q, R; X56=any amino acid; X57=any amino acid; X58=I, L, V or M; X59=K, Q, R; X60=R or absent; X61=S or absent; X62=D or absent; X63=T or absent; X64=L or absent; X65=T or absent; X66=K, R; X67=any amino acid; X68=N, D; X69=F, I, L, V or M; X70=any amino acid; X71=any amino acid; X72=A, T, V; and X73=any amino acid.


bHLH121 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 18







Conserved ‘bHLH domain’ of bHLH121 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



bHLH




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
bHLH

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
bHLH


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved bHLH
bHLH
domain of


NO:
Identifier
bHLH121
coordinates
domain
domain
bHLH121





388
At/bHLH121
100% 
6-60
RKSQKAGREKLRR
813
100% 



or
(284/284)

EKLNEHFVELGNV

 (5/55)



AT3G19860.1


LDPERPKNDKATIL






TDTVQLLKELTSEVN





390
Cc/clementine0.9_014901m
64%
60-114
RKMQKADREKLRR
814
80%




(185/288)

DRLNEHFTELGNAL

(44/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILA






DTVQLLKDLTSQVE





392
Cc/clementine0.9_014926m
64%
60-114
RKMQKADREKLRR
815
80%




(185/288)

DRLNEHFTELGNAL

(44/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILA






DTVQLLKDLTSQVE





400
Pt/POPTR_0004s17540.1
62%
42-96 
RKIQKADREKLRR
819
80%




(156/249)

DRLNEHFVELGNTL

(44/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILA






DTIQLLKDLTSQVD





402
Pt/POPTR_0009s13220.1
61%
38-92 
RKIQKADREKLRR
820
80%




(176/288)

DRLNEHFVELGNTL

(44/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILA






DTVQLLKDLNSKVD





386
Vv/GSVIVT01018777001
56%
50-104
RKVQKADREKLRR
812
78%




(141/248)

DRLNEHFLELGNTL

(43/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILA






DTIQMLKDLTAEVN





382
Gm/Glyma07g26910.1
53%
56-110
RKVLKADREKLRR
810
78%




(123/232)

DRLNEHFQELGNA

(43/55)






LDPDRPKNDKATIL






TETVQMLKDLTAE






VN





394
Gm/Glyma08g15740.1
65%
7-61
RKTQKADREKLRR
816
76%




(157/238)

DRLNEQFVELGNIL

(42/55)






DPDRPKNDKATIIG






DTIQLLKDLTSQVS





398
Gm/Glyma12g02740.1
57%
7-61
RKTQKADREKLRR
818
76%




(137/239)

DRFNVQFVELGNIL

(42/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILG






DTIQLLKDLTSEVS





396
Gm/Glyma15g29630.1
63%
21-75 
RKTQKADREKLRR
817
74%




(151/238)

DRINEQFVELGNIL

(41/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILC






DTIQLLKDLISQVS





404
Vv/GSVIVT01024084001
57%
46-100
RKVQKADREKLRR
821
74%




(166/288)

DRLNEQFIELGNAL

(41/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILS






DTIQLLKDLTAQVE





384
Pt/POPTR_0005s11550.1
51%
61-115
KKVQKADREKLRR
811
74%




(116/227)

DNLNEQFLELGTTL

(41/55)






DPDRPKNDKATILT






DTIQVLKDLTAEVN





378
Si/Si017804m
48%
36-90 
RKVQKADREKMRR
808
74%




(130/268)

DKLNEQFQELGNT

(41/55)






LDPDRPRNDKATIL






GDTIQMLKDLTSH






VN





406
St/Solyc01g111130.2.1
61%
57-111
RKVQKADREKLRR
822
70%




(151/247)

DRLNEQFMELGKT

(39/55)






LDPDRPKNDKASIL






SDTVQILKDLTAQVS





408
Zm/GRMZM2G114444_T02
50%
30-84 
RKVQKADREKMRR
823
70%




(119/236)

DKLNEQFQDLGNA

(39/55)






LDPDRPRNDKATIL






GDTIQMLKDLTTQ






VN





374
Bd/Bradi3g11520.1
49%
40-94 
RKVQKADRERMRR
806
69%




(127/256)

DKLNEQFQELGTTL

(38/55)






DPDRPRNDKATILG






DTIQMLKDLSSQVN





376
Os/LOC_Os02g23823.1
48%
40-94 
RKVQKADREKMRR
807
69%




(116/241)

DRLNEQFQELGSTL

(38/55)






DPDRPRNDKATILS






DAIQMLKDLTSQVN





380
At/AT4G36063800.1
65%
41-99 
KKEAVCSQKAERE
809
61%




 (68/104)

KLRRDKLKEQFLEL

(36/59)






GNALDPNRPKSDK






ASVLTDTIQMLKD






VMNQVD
















TABLE 19







Conserved ‘putative leucine zipper domain’ of bHLH121 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








putative








leucine








zipper





Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in




Col. 3
Putative

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to




Percent
leucine

NO: of
putative


Col. 1

identity of
zipper

putative
leucine


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5 Conserved
leucine
zipper


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
putative leucine
zipper
domain of


NO:
Identifier
bHLH121
coordinates
zipper domain
domain
bHLH121





388
At/bHLH121
100% 
61-97
KLKSEYTALTDESR
831
100% 



or
(284/284)

ELTQEKNDLREEKT

(37/37)



AT3G19860.1


SLKSDIENL





406
Sl/Solyc01g111130.2.1
61%
112-148
RLKSEYAALTDESR
840
89%




(151/247)

ELTQEKNDLREEK

(33/37)






ASLKSDIESL





394
Gm/Glyma08g15740.1
65%
62-98
KLKDEYATLNEESR
834
81%




(157/238)

ELTQEKNDLREEK

(30/37)






ASLKSDIGNL





390
Cc/clementine0.9_014901m
64%
115-151
KLKTEHAALTEESR
832
81%




(185/288)

ELTQEKNDLREEKL

(30/37)






SLRSEIENL





392
Cc/clementine0.9_014926m
64%
115-151
KLKTEHAALTEESR
833
81%




(185/288)

ELTQEKNDLREEKL

(30/37)






SLRSEIENL





400
Pt/POPTR_0004s17540.1
62%
 97-133
KLKAEYATLSEESL
837
81%




(156/249)

ELTQEKNDLREEK

(30/37)






ASLKSDIENL





402
Pt/POPTR_0009s13220.1
61%
 93-129
KLKAEHAALSEESR
838
78%




(176/288)

ELTLEKNDLREEKA

(29/37)






SLKSDVENL





396
Gm/Glyma15g29630.1
63%
 76-112
KLKDEYAMLNEES
835
75%




(151/238)

RELTLEKTDLREEK

(28/37)






ASLKSDIDNL





404
Vv/GSVIVT01024084001
57%
101-137
KLKAENASLNEESR
839
75%




(166/288)

ELTQEKNDLREEK

(28/37)






ASLKSATENL





382
Gm/Glyma07g26910.1
53%
111-147
RLKTEHKTLSEESR
828
75%




(123/232)

ELMQEKNELREEK

(28/37)






TSLKSDIENL





374
Bd/Bradi3g11520.1
49%
 95-131
KLKAEYSSLSEEER
824
72%




(127/256)

ELTQEKNELRDEK

(27/37)






ASLKSDIDNL





398
Gm/Glyma12g02740.1
57%
62-98
KLKDEYATLNEESC
836
70%




(137/239)

ELAQEKNELREEK

(26/37)






ASLKSDILKL





386
Vv/GSVIVT01018777001
56%
105-141
RLKVECAALSEESR
830
70%




(141/248)

ELVQEKNELREEK

(26/37)






VALKSDIDNL





378
Si/Si017804m
48%
 91-127
KLKAEYTSLSEEAR
826
70%




(130/268)

ELTQEKNELRDEK

(26/37)






ASLKSEVDNL





380
At/AT4G36060.1
65%
100-136
RLKAEYETLSQESR
827
67%




 (68/104)

ELIQEKSELREEKA

(25/37)






TLKSDIEIL





408
Zm/GRMZM2G114444_T02
50%
 85-121
KLKAEYTSLSEEAC
841
67%




(119/236)

ELTQEKNELRDEK

(25/37)






ASLKSEVDNL





376
Os/LOC_Os02g23823.1
48%
 95-131
KLKAEYTSLSEEAR
825
67%




(116/241)

ELTQEKNELRDEK

(25/37)






VSLKFEVDNL





384
Pt/POPTR_0005s11550.1
51%
116-152
RLKAECATLSEETH
829
62%




(116/227)

ELMQEKNELREEK

(23/37)






ASLKADTENL









These functionally-related and/or closely-related bHLH121 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus bHLH domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 858:









X1KX3X4X5X6X7X8KAX11REX14X15RRX18X19X20X21X22X23F





X25X26LGX29X30LDPX34RPX37X38DKAX42X43X44X45X46X47





X48QX50LKX53X54X55X56X57VX59







where X1=K or R; X3=E or absent; X4=A or absent; X5=V or absent; X6=C or absent; X7=any amino acid; X8=any amino acid; X11=any amino acid; X14=K or R; X15=I, L, V or M; X18=D or E; X19=N, K or R; X20=F, I, L, V or M; X21=N or K; X22=any amino acid; X23=H or Q; X25=any amino acid; X26=D or E; X29=any amino acid; X30=any amino acid; X34=N, D or E; X37=K or R; X38=any amino acid; X42=S or T; X43=I, L, V or M; X44=I, L, V or M; X45=any amino acid; X46=D, E; X47=A or T; X48=I, L, V or M; X50=I, L, V or M; X53=D or E; X54=I, L, V or M; X55=any amino acid; X56=any amino acid; X57=any amino acid; and X59=any amino acid.


These functionally-related and/or closely-related bHLH121 clade polypeptides may also be identified by a consensus putative leucine zipper domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 859:









X1LKX4EX6X7X8LX10X11EX13X14ELX17X18EKX21X22LRX25EK





X28X29LX31X32X33X34X35X36L







where X1=R or K; X4=any amino acid; X6=any amino acid; X7=any amino acid; X8=any amino acid; X10=any amino acid; X11=Q, D or E; X13=any amino acid; X14=any amino acid; X17=A, I, L, V or M; X18=any amino acid; X21=any amino acid; X22=D or E; X25=D or E; X28=any amino acid; X29=S, A or T; X31=K or R; X32=any amino acid; X33=any amino acid; X34=T, I, L, V or M; X35=any amino acid; and X36=any amino acid.


BBX26 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 20







Conserved ‘BBX domain’ of BBX26 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of




Col. 3



BBX




Percent
Col. 4

Col. 6
domain in


Col. 1

identity of
BBX

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Col. 5
NO: of
BBX


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
Conserved BBX
BBX
domain of


NO:
Identifier
BBX26
coordinates
domain
domain
BBX26





410
At/BBX26 or
 100% (251/251)
5-41
CHTCRHVTAVIHC
769
100% 



AT1G60250.1


VTEALNFCLTCDNL

(37/37)






RHHNNIHAEH





412
At/AT1G68190.1
33% (28/84)
14-51 
CEFCKAYRAVVYCI
770
36%






ADTANLCLTCDAK

(14/38)






VHSANSLSGRH





414
Pt/POPTR_0008s12410.1
33% (24/71)
5-42
CEFCMALRPVVYC
771
31%






NADAAYLCLSCDA

(12/38)






KVHSANALFNRH





420
Sl/Solyc04g007470.2
26% (25/94)
7-44
CEFCMLLKPVVYC
774
31%






EADAAHLCLSCDA

(12/38)






KVHSANALSNRH





416
Gm/Glyma10g41540.1
27% (22/79)
5-42
CEFCTALRPLVYCK
772
28%






ADAAYLCLSCDAK

(11/38)






VHLANAVSGRH





418
Gm/Glyma20g25700.1
27% (22/79)
5-42
CEFCTALRPLVYCK
773
28%






ADAAYLCLSCDSK

(11/38)






VHLANAVSGRH









These functionally-related and/or closely-related BBX26 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus BBX domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 860:









CX2X3CX5X6X7X8X9X10 X11X12CX14X15X16X17X18X19X20CL





X23CDX26X27X28HX30X31NX33X34X35X36X37H







where X2=any amino acid; X3=any amino acid; X5=any amino acid; X6=any amino acid; X7=Y, I, L, V, or M; X8=any amino acid; X9=A or P; X19=I, L, V, or M; X11=I, L, V, or M; X12=any amino acid; X14=any amino acid; X15=A or T; X16=D or E; X17=A or T; X18=any amino acid; X19=any amino acid; X20=F, I, L, V, or M; X23=S or T; X26=any amino acid; X27=any amino acid; X28=any amino acid; X39=any amino acid; X31=A or absent; X33=any amino acid; X34=I, L, V, or M; X35=any amino acid; X36=any amino acid; and X37=any amino acid.


bHLH121 Clade Polypeptides









TABLE 21







Conserved ‘Methyltransferase domain’ of PMT24 and closely related sequences



















Col. 7








Percent








identity of








methyl-








transferase




Col. 3


Col. 6
domain in




Percent
Col. 4

SEQ ID
Col. 5 to


Col. 1

identity of
Methyltransferase
Col. 5
NO: of
methyl-


SEQ
Col. 2
polypeptide
domain in
Conserved
methyl-
transferase


ID
Species/
in Col. 1 to
amino acid
methyltransferase
transferase
domain of


NO:
Identifier
PMT24
coordinates
domain
domain
PMT24





444
At/bHLH121
100% 
367-584
VILDVGCGVASFGG
786
100% 



or
(770/770)

YLFDRDVLALSFAP

(218/218)



AT1G29470.1


KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAMSNVMGTK






RLPFPGSVFDLIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRALRPGGF






FVWSATPVYRKTE






EDVGIWKAMSKLT






KAMCWELMTIKKD






ELNEVGAAIYQKP






MSNKCYNERSQNE






PPLCKDSDDQNAA






WNVPLEACIHKVT






EDSSKRGAVWPES






WPERVETVPQWLD






SQEGVY





446
At/AT2G34300.1
81%
367-584
VILDVGCGVASFGG
787
92%




(638/783)

YLFERDVLALSFAP

(202/218)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAMLNVMGTK






RLPFPGSVFDLIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRALRPGGF






FVWSATPVYRKNE






EDSGIWKAMSELT






KAMCWKLVTIKKD






KLNEVGAAIYQKPT






SNKCYNKRPQNEPP






LCKDSDDQNAAW






NVPLEACMHKVTE






DSSKRGAVWPNM






WPERVETAPEWLD






SQEGVY





450
Pt/POPTR_0005s20670.1
66%
423-640
VILDVGCGVASFGG
789
81%




(548/826)

YLFERDVLAMSFAP

(177/218)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAMLAVMGTK






RLPFPSSVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHVEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVGIWKAMSKLT






KSMCWDLVVIKKD






KLNGVGAAIFRKPT






SNDCYNNRPQNEPP






LCKESDDPNAAWN






VPLEACMHKVPED






ASVRGSRWPEQWP






QRLEKPPYWLNSQ






VGVY





448
Pt/POPTR00_02s07640.1
64%
412-629
VILDVGCGVASFGG
788
80%




(526/815)

YLLEKDVLAMSFA

(176/218)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAMLAVMGT






KRLPFPNSVFDLVH






CARCRVPWHIEGG






KLLLELNRVLRPGG






YFVWSATPVYRKR






PEDVGIWKAMSKL






TKSMCWDLVVIKT






DTLNGVGAAIYRK






PTSNDCYNNRPQN






EPPLCKESDDPNAA






WNVLLEACMHKVP






VDASVRGSHWPEQ






WPKRLEKPPYWLN






SQVGVY





478
Pt/POPTR_0005s06640.1
62%
392-610
VILDVGCGVASFGG
803
75%




(499/803)

YLFDRDVLAMSFA

(166/219)






PKDEHEAQIQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPYPGRVFDAVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPVYQKLA






EDVEIWQAMTELT






KAMCWELVSINKD






TLNGVGVATYRKP






TSNDCYEKRSKQEP






PLCEASDDPNAAW






NVPLQACMHKVPV






GSLERGSQWPEQW






PARLDKTPYWMLS






SQVGVY





468
Gm/Glyma04g38870.1
62%
390-608
VILDVGCGVASFGG
798
75%




(494/794)

FLFDRDVLAMSLAP

(165/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPFPGKVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPIYQKLPE






DVEIWKAMKTLTK






AMCWEVVSISKDQ






VNGVGVAVYKKPT






SNECYEQRSKNEPP






LCPDSDDPNAAWN






IKLQACMHKVPASS






KERGSKLPELWPA






RLTKVPYWLLSSQ






VGVY





480
Pt/POPTR_0007s04340.1
61%
420-638
VILDVGCGVASFGG
804
75%




(506/829)

YLFDRDVLTMSFAP

(165/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPYPGRVFDAVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGL






FVWSATPVYQKLA






EDVEIWQAMTELT






KAMCWELVSINKD






TINGVGVATYRKPT






SNDCYEKRSKQEPP






LCEASDDPNAAWN






VPLQACMHKVPVD






SLERGSQWPEQWP






ARLGKTPYWMLSS






QVGVY





428
Si/Si000354m
60%
397-615
VILDVGCGVASFGG
778
75%




(486/810)

YMFDRDVLTMSFA

(166/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPYPSRVFDVIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGM






LLLELNRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWNAMSALT






KSMCWKMVNKTK






DKLNQVGMAIYQK






PMDNNCYEKRSEN






NPPLCKDSDDADA






AWNVPLEACMHKL






PAGPTVRGAKWPE






SWPQRLEKTPFWL






NGSQVGVY





466
Eg/Eucgr.I00186.1
59%
410-628
VILDVGCGVASFGG
797
75%




(487/819)

YLFDRDVLAMSLA

(165/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTT






RLPFPSRVFDIVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRLLRPGGF






FVWSATPVYQKIPD






DVAIWKAMSALLK






SMCWELISINKDTL






NGVGVATYRKPMS






NECYEKRSQNDPP






MCADSDDSNAAW






YVPLQTCMHKIPID






SAERGSQWPEEWP






ARLVKTPYWLLSS






QVGVY





470
Gm/Glyma06g16050.1
62%
402-620
VILDVGCGVASFGG
799
74%




(503/810)

FLFDRDVLAMSLAP

(164/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPFPGKVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPIYQKLPE






DVEIWKAMKALTK






AMCWEVVSISKDP






VNGVGVAVYRKPT






SNECYEQRSKNEPP






LCPDSDDPNAAWN






IQLQACLHKAPVSS






KERGSKLPELWPA






RLIKVPYWLSSSQV






GVY





482
Vv/GSVIVT01026451001
61%
357-575
VVLDVGCGVASFG
805
74%




(480/775)

GYLFDKDVLTMSF

(164/219)






APKDEHEAQVQFA






LERGIPGISAVMGT






KRLPFPAMVFDVV






HCARCRVPWHIEG






GKLLLELNRVLRPG






GFFVWSATPVYQK






LADDVAIWNAMTE






LMKSMCWELVVIK






RDVVNRVAAAIYK






KPTSNDCYEKRSQ






NEPPICADSEDANA






AWNVPLQACMHK






VPVDASKRGSQWP






ELWPARLDKSPYW






LTSSQVGVY





452
Eg/Eucgr.F04285.1
55%
423-639
VILDVGCGVASFGG
790
74%




(465/832)

YLFERDVLTMSFAP

(162/218)






KDVHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAILGVMGTKR






LPFPGGVFDVIHCA






RCRVPWHIEGGKL






LLELNRVLRPGGYF






LWSATPIYRRDQED






IGIWKEMSKLTMA






MCWDLVMIKKDK






LNKVAIAMYRKPT






SNECYEKRPQNEPP






LCDNFDDPNSAWN






VTLQACMHKVPVD






MSKRGSNWPEKWP






VRLEKPPYWLNEL






GVY





460
Vv/GSVIVT01008776001
73%
150-368
VILDVGCGVASFGG
794
73%




(409/554)

YIFERDVLAMSFAP

(162/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTTR






LPFPSRVFDVVHCA






RCRVPWHIEGGKL






LLELNRVLRPGGYF






VWSATPVYRKVPE






DVGIWNAMSEITK






KICWDLVAMSKDS






LNGIGAAIYRKPTS






NECYEKRPRNEPPL






CEESDNADAAWNI






PLQACMHKVPVLT






SERGSQWPEQWPL






RVEKAPNWLKSSQ






VGVY





462
Sl/Solyc04g063230.2.1
59%
364-582
VILDVGCGVASFGG
795
73%




(470/784)

YLFERDVLAMSLA

(162/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPFPGKVFDAVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGH






FIWSATPVYRKDEE






NVGIWEAMSELTK






SMCWELLEINEDKL






NEVGVAIFRKPTTN






DCYQSRTQNDPPM






CEEADDPDAAWNI






TLQACLHKAPADA






SARGAKWPAKWPL






RSEKLPYWLKSSQ






VGVY





426
Zm/GRMZM2G049269_T01
59%
392-610
VILDVGCGVASFGG
777
73%




(479/801)

YMFDRDALTMSFA

(160/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPYPSRVFDVIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGM






LLLELNRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWNAMSTLT






KSMCWKMVNKTK






DKLNQVGMVIYQK






PMDNICYEKRSENS






PPLCKESDDADAA






WNVPLEACMHKLP






GGSKVRGSKWPEL






WPQRLEKTPFWID






GSKVGVY





476
Sl/Solyc05g056580.2.1
59%
409-627
VILDVGCGVASFGG
802
73%




(486/818)

YLFERDVLAMSLA

(160/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPFPSRVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGL






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWEAMQKLT






KAMCWDLVSKTK






DRVNGVGVAVYR






KPTSNECYEQRSKD






APPICQGSDDPNAA






WNVPLQACMHKA






PVATSERGSQWPEP






WPARLSKSPYWLL






SSQVGVY





474
Gm/Glyma08g00320.1
58%
438-656
VILDVGCGVASFGG
801
73%




(493/847)

FLFERDVLTMSLAP

(162/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPYPGRVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPIYQKLPE






DVEIWNEMKALTK






AMCWEVVSISKDK






LNGVGIAVYKKPTS






NECYEKRSQNQPPI






CPDSDDPNAAWNV






PLQACMHKVPVSS






TERGSQWPEKWPA






RLTNIPYWLTNSQV






GVY





472
Gm/Glyma05g32670.1
58%
427-645
VILDVGCGVASFGG
800
73%




(492/837)

FLFERDVLTMSLAP

(161/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAISAVMGTKR






LPYPGRVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPIYQKLPE






DVEIWNEMKALTK






AMCWEVVSISKDK






LNGVGIAVYKKPTS






NECYEKRSQNQPPI






CPDSDDPNAAWNIP






LQACMHKVPVSST






ERGSQWPEKWPAR






LTNTPYWLTNSQV






GVY





456
Gm/Glyma04g42270.1
56%
429-646
VILDVGCGVASFGG
792
73%




(473/835)

YLFEKDVLTMSFAP

(160/218)






KDVHEAQVQFALE






RGIPATLGVMGTV






RLPYPGSVFDLVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGH






FVWSATPVYQKDP






EDVEIWKAMGEIT






KSMCWDLVVIAKD






KLNGVAAAIYRKP






TDNECYNNRIKHEP






PMCSESDDPNTAW






NVSLQACMHKVPV






DASERGSIWPEQWP






LRLEKPPYWIDSQA






GVY





422
Bd/Bradi2g57087.1
59%
394-612
VILDVGCGVASFGG
775
72%




(485/810)

YMFDRDVLTMSFA

(158/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPYPSRVFDVIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWNAMSSLT






KSMCWKMVKKTK






DTLNQVGMAIYQK






PMDNNCYEKRSED






SPPLCKETDDADAS






WNITLQACIHKLPV






GPSVRGSKWPEFW






PQRLEKTPFWIDGS






HVGVY





424
Os/LOC_Os01g66110.1
58%
406-624
VILDVGCGVASFGG
776
72%




(479/812)

YMFERDVLTMSFA

(159/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPYPSRVFDVIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGM






LLLELNRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWNAMSSLT






KAMCWKMVNKTK






DKLNQVGMAIYQK






PMDNSCYEKRPEN






SPPLCKETDDADAA






WNVPLQACMHKLP






AGQSVRGSKWPET






WPQRLEKTPYWID






DSHVGIY





464
At/AT5G64030.1
58%
425-643
VVLDVGCGVASFG
796
72%




(490/834)

GFLFDRDVITMSLA

(159/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTT






RLPFPGRVFDIVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGF






FVWSATPVYQKKT






EDVEIWKAMSELIK






KMCWELVSINKDTI






NGVGVATYRKPTS






NECYKNRSEPVPPI






CADSDDPNASWKV






PLQACMHTAPEDK






TQRGSQWPEQWPA






RLEKAPFWLSSSQT






GVY





458
Gm/Glyma06g12540.1
57%
406-623
VILDVGCGVASFGG
793
72%




(464/811)

YLFEKDVLTMSFAP

(159/218)






KDVHEAQVQFALE






RGIPATLGVMGTV






RLPYPGSVFDLLHC






ARCRVPWHVEGGK






LLLELNRVLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKDP






EDVEIWKAMGEIT






KSMCWDLVVIAKD






KLNGVAAAIYRKP






TDNECYNNRIKNEP






SMCSESDDPNTAW






NVSLQACMHKVPV






DASERGSIWPEQWP






LRLEKPPYWIDSQA






GVY





438
Bd/Bradi4g23610.1
50%
469-688
VVLDVGCGVASFG
783
70%




(440/868)

GFLFDRGALTMSFA

(155/220)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPALSAVMGTK






RLPFPAGVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIDGGM






LLLELNRLLRPGGF






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWDDMVKLT






KAMCWEMVKKTE






DTLDQVGLVIFRKP






KSNRCYETRRQKEP






PLCDGSDDPNAAW






NIKLRACMHRAPA






DYPSVRGSRWPAP






WPERAEAVPYWLN






NSQVGVY





434
Zm/GRMZM2G002642_T02
69%
271-489
VVLDVGCGVASFG
781
69%




(387/557)

GYLFDRDVITMSFA

(152/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPFPSRVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELDRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWQAMSALT






SSMCWKMVNKVK






DRVNRVGIAIYRKP






TDNSCYEARSETNP






PLCGEYDDPDAAW






NISLGACMHKLPV






DPTVRGSQWPELW






PLRLEKPPYWLRGS






EAGVY





440
Os/LOC_Os11g08314.1
57%
468-686
VALDVGCGVASFG
784
69%




(418/726)

GYLFDHDVLTMSL

(153/219)






APKDEHEAQVQFA






LERGIPAISAVMGT






RRLPFPSNVFDAVH






CARCRVPWHIEGG






MLLLELNRLLRPGG






FFVWSATPVYQELP






EDVEIWGEMVKLT






KAMCWEMVSKTS






DTVDQVGLVTFRK






PADNACYMKRRQK






EPPLCEPSDDPNAA






WNITLRACMHWVP






TDPSVRGSWWPER






WPERMEKTPYWLN






SSQVGVY





430
Bd/Bradi5g27590.1
55%
319-537
VVLDVGCGVASFG
779
69%




(429/773)

GYLFDRDVLTMSF

(153/219)






APKDEHEAQVQFA






LERGIPAISAVMGT






KRLPFPGRVFDAVH






CARCRVPWHIEGG






KLLLELDRLLRPGG






YFVWSATPAYQKL






PEDVEIWQAMSAL






TRSMCWKMVNKV






KDRLNRVGVAIFQ






KPIDNRCYDGRSAA






NLPLCGEYDNVDA






AWNVSLESCIHKLP






VDPAIRSSRWPEEW






PLRLERAPYWLKSS






EPGVY





454
Eg/Eucgr.F04286.1
54%
407-624
VILDVGCGVGSFGG
791
69%




(441/813)

YLFERDVLTMSFAP

(152/219)






KDEHEAQVQFALE






RGIPAMLAVMGTK






RLPFPSGVFDAIHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELNRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPIYRKGPE






DLGIWKEMSKLTT






AMCWNFTLIKRKD






KMNKVSIALYRKP






TSNECIESRTKNEPP






LCNGLDDANSTWN






VTLQACMHKVPTD






MSERGSQWPENWL






HRLGKPPYWLNKV






AVN





442
Si/Si028042m
51%
434-654
VVLDVGCGVASFG
785
69%




(436/840)

GYLFDRDVLTMSL

(154/221)






APKDEHEAQVQFA






LERGIPAISAVMGT






RRLPFPGGVFDVVH






CARCRVPWHIDGG






MLLLELNRLLRPGG






VFVWSATPVYQKL






PDDVEIWDEMAKL






TKAMCWEMVAKT






KHTVVDDQVGVAI






FRKPERNGCYEKRP






EKAPPLCEPSDDPN






AAWNIKLRACMHR






VPEDPSERGARWPE






PWPERLGKAPYWL






DGSQTGVY





432
Os/LOC_Os04g59590.1
65%
275-493
VVLDVGCGVASFG
780
68%




(393/599)

GYLFDRDVLTMSF

(151/219)






APKDEHEAQVQFA






LERGIPAMSAVMG






TKRLPFPGRVFDVV






HCARCRVPWHIEG






GKLLLELDRLLRPG






GYFVWSATPVYQK






LPEDVEIWEAMSTL






TRSMCWEMVNKV






KDRVNRVGIAIFRK






PTDNSCYEARSAA






NPPICGEYDDPDAA






WNISLQSCVHRLPT






DPAIRGSQWPVEW






PLRLEKPPYWLKNS






EAGVY





436
Si/Si021320m
55%
337-555
VVLDVGCGVASFG
782
68%




(432/776)

GYLFDRDVITMSFA

(150/219)






PKDEHEAQVQFAL






ERGIPAISAVMGTK






RLPFPSRVFDVVHC






ARCRVPWHIEGGK






LLLELDRLLRPGGY






FVWSATPVYQKLP






EDVEIWEAMSALT






RSMCWKMVNKVK






DRVNRVGIAIFRKP






TDNSCYEERSEANS






PICGEYDDPDAAW






NVSLRTCMHKLPV






DLTIRGSKWPELWP






LRLEKPPYWLKSSE






AGVY









These functionally-related and/or closely-related PMT24 clade polypeptides may be identified by a consensus methyltransferase domain sequence, SEQ ID NO: 861:









VX2LDVGCGVASFGGX15X16FX18X19X20X21X22X23X24SX26APK





DX31HEAQVQFALERGIPAX47X48X49VMGTX54RLPX58PX60X61VF





DX65X66HCARCRVPWHX77X78GGX81LLLELX87RX89LRPGGX95F





X97WSATPX103YX105X106X107X108X109X110X111X112IW





X115X116MX118X119X120X121X122X123MCWX127X128X129





X130X131X132X133X134X135X136X137X138X139X140VX142





X143X144X145X146X147KPX150X151NX153CYX156X157RX159





X160X161X162X163X164X165CX167X168X169DX171X172X173





X174X175WX177X178X179LX181X182CX184HX186X187X188





X189X190X191X192X193X194RX196X197X198X199PX201X202





WPX205RX207X208X209X210PX212WX214X215X216SX218X219





GX221Y







where X2=any amino acid; X15=F or Y; X16=I, L, V or M; X18=D or E; X19=H, K or R; X20=D or G; X21=any amino acid; X22=I, L, V or M; X23=A or T; X24=I, L, V or M; X26=F, I, L, V or M; X31=any amino acid; X47=T, I, L, V or M; X48=any amino acid; X49=any amino acid; X54=I, L, V or M; X58=F or Y; X60=A, S or G; X61=any amino acid; X65=I, L, V or M; X66=I, L, V or M; X77=I, L, V or M; X78=D or E; X81=any amino acid; X87=N or D; X89=A, I, L, V or M; X95=any amino acid; X97=I, L, V or M; X 103=A, I, L, V, or M; X105=Q or R; X106=any amino acid; X107=any amino acid; X108=any amino acid; X109=D or E; X110=D or N; X111=any amino acid; X112=any amino acid; X115=any amino acid; X116=any amino acid; X118=any amino acid; X119=any amino acid; X120=I, L, V or M; X121=T, I, L, V or M; X122=any amino acid; X123=any amino acid; X127=any amino acid; X128=I, L, V or M; X129=I, L, V or M; X130=any amino acid; X131=any amino acid; X132=any amino acid; X133=any amino acid; X134=H, D; X135=any amino acid; X136=I, L, V or M; X137=V or absent; X138=D or absent; X139=I, L, V or M; X140=any amino acid; X142=A or G; X143=any amino acid; X144=any amino acid; X145=T, I, L, V or M; X146=F or Y; X147=Q, R or K; X150=any amino acid; X151=any amino acid; X153=any amino acid; X156=any amino acid; X157=any amino acid; X159=any amino acid; X160=any amino acid; X161=any amino acid; X162=any amino acid; X163=any amino acid; X164=S or P; X165=I, L, V or M; X167=any amino acid; X168=any amino acid; X169=any amino acid; X171=N or D; X172=any amino acid; X173=N or D; X174=A or T; X175=A or S; X177=any amino acid; X178=I, L, V or M; X179=any amino acid; X181=any amino acid; X182=A, S or T; X184=I, L, V or M; X186=any amino acid; X187=A, I, L, V or M; X188=any amino acid; X189=any amino acid; X190=any amino acid; X191=Y or absent; X192=any amino acid; X193=any amino acid; X194=any amino acid; X196=S or G; X197=S or A; X198=any amino acid; X199=any amino acid; X201=any amino acid; X202=any amino acid; X205=any amino acid; X207=any amino acid; X208=any amino acid; X209=any amino acid; X210=any amino acid; X212=any amino acid; X214=I, L, V or M; X215=any amino acid; X216=any amino acid or absent; X218=K, E, H or Q; X219=any amino acid; and X221I, L, V or M.


Alternative consensus sequences comprising the above with conservative substitutions found in the instant Tables are also envisaged and may be expected to provide equivalent function(s).


The presence of one or more of these consensus sequences and/or these amino acid residues is correlated with conferring of improved or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency to a plant when the expression level of the polypeptide is altered in a plant by being reduced, knocked-out, or overexpressed. An AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide sequence that is “functionally-related and/or closely-related” to the listed full length protein sequences or domains provided in the instant Tables may also have, to any of the listed sequences found in the Sequence Listing or to the entire length of a listed sequence, at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to any of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444 or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241, and/or at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483, 490, 510, 538, 566, 588, 599, 608, 623, 629, 659, 686, 702, 721, 741, 760, 769, 786, 813, and/or at least 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to any of consensus sequences SEQ ID NOs: 842-861. The presence of the listed domains in a listed polypeptide sequence is correlated with the conferring of improved or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency to a plant when the expression level of the polypeptide is altered in a plant by being reduced, knocked-out, or overexpressed. All of the sequences that adhere to these functional and sequential relationships are herein referred to as AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptides, or which fall within the AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade exemplified in the phylogenetic trees presented in the Figures.


Example II
Plant Genotypes and Vector and Cloning Information

A variety of constructs may be used to modulate the activity of regulatory polypeptides (RPs), and to test the activity of orthologs and paralogs in transgenic plant material. This platform provides the material for all subsequent analysis.


An individual plant “genotype” refers to a set of plant lines containing a particular construct or knockout (for example, this might be 35S lines for a given gene sequence (GID, Gene Identifier) being tested, 35S lines for a paralog or ortholog of that gene sequence, lines for an RNAi construct, lines for a GAL4 fusion construct, or lines in which expression of the gene sequence is driven from a particular promoter that enhances expression in particular cell, tissue or condition). For a given genotype arising from a particular transformed construct, multiple independent transgenic lines may be examined for morphological and physiological phenotypes. Each individual “line” (also sometimes known as an “event”) refers to the progeny plant or plants deriving from the stable integration of the transgene(s), carried within the T-DNA borders contained within a transformation construct, into a specific location or locations within the genome of the original transformed cell. It is well known in the art that different lines deriving from transformation with a given transgene may exhibit different levels of expression of that transgene due to so called “position effects” of the surrounding chromatin at the locus of integration in the genome, and therefore it is necessary to examine multiple lines containing each construct of interest.


(1) Overexpression/Tissue-Enhanced/Conditional Expression.


Expression of a given regulatory protein from a particular promoter, for example a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter (e.g., a green tissue- or leaf-enhanced promoter), is achieved either by a direct-promoter fusion construct in which that regulatory protein is cloned directly behind the promoter of interest or by a two component system.


The Two-Component Expression System.


For the two-component system, two separate constructs are used: Promoter::LexA-GAL4TA and opLexA::RP. The first of these (Promoter::LexA-GAL4TA) comprises a desired promoter cloned in front of a LexA DNA binding domain fused to a GAL4 activation domain. The construct vector backbone (pMEN48, also known as P5375) also carries a kanamycin resistance marker, along with an opLexA::GFP (green fluorescent protein) reporter. Transgenic lines are obtained containing this first component, and a line is selected that shows reproducible expression of the reporter gene in the desired pattern through a number of generations. A homozygous population is established for that line, and the population is supertransformed with the second construct (opLexA::RP) carrying the regulatory protein of interest cloned behind a LexA operator site. This second construct vector backbone (pMEN53, also known as P5381) also contains a sulfonamide resistance marker.


Conditional Expression.


Various promoters can be used to overexpress disclosed polypeptides in plants to confer improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency. However, in some cases, there may be limitations in the use of various proteins that confer increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency when the proteins are overexpressed. Negative side effects associated with constitutive overexpression such as small size, delayed growth, increased disease sensitivity, and development and alteration in flowering time are not uncommon A number of stress-inducible promoters can be used promote protein expression during the periods of stress, and therefore may be used to induce overexpression of polypeptides that can confer improved stress tolerance when they are needed without the adverse developmental or morphological effects that may be associated with their constitutive overexpression.


Promoters that drive protein expression in response to stress can be used to regulate the expression of the disclosed polypeptides to confer photosynthetic resource use efficiency to plants. The promoter may regulate expression of a disclosed polypeptide to an effective level in a photosynthetic tissue. Effective level in this regard refers to an expression level that confers greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency in the transgenic plant relative to the control plant that, for example, does not comprise a recombinant polynucleotide that encodes the disclosed polypeptide. Optionally, the promoter does not regulate protein expression in a constitutive manner.


Such promoters include, but are not limited to, the sequences located in the promoter regions of At5g52310 (RD29A), At5g52300, AT1G16850, At3g46230, AT1G52690, At2g37870, AT5G43840, At5g66780, At3g17520, and At4g09600.


In addition, promoters with expression specific to or enhanced in particular cells or tissue types may be used to express a given regulatory protein only in these cells or tissues. Examples of such promoter types include but are not limited to promoters expressed in green tissue, guard cell, epidermis, whole root, root hairs, vasculature, apical meristems, and developing leaves.


Table 22 lists a number of photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoters, specifically, mesophyll tissue-enhanced promoters from rice, that may be used to regulate expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides found in the Sequence Listing and structurally and functionally-related sequences. Promoters that may be used to drive expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides found in the Sequence Listing and structurally and functionally-related sequences included, but are not limited to, promoter sequences SEQ ID NO: 862-864 and the following promoters listed in Table 22, as well as promoters that are at least 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to SEQ ID NO: 862-888, or comprise a functional fragment of promoters that are at least 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to SEQ ID NO: 862-888.









TABLE 22







Rice Genes with Photosynthetic Tissue-Enhanced Promoters











Rice Gene Identifier of Photosyn-



SEQ ID NO:
thetic Tissue-Enhanced Promoter







865
Os02g09720



866
Os05g34510



867
Os11g08230



868
Os01g64390



869
Os06g15760



870
Os12g37560



871
Os03g17420



872
Os04g51000



873
Os01g01960



874
Os05g04990



875
Os02g44970



876
Os01g25530



877
Os03g30650



878
Os01g64910



879
Os07g26810



880
Os07g26820



881
Os09g11220



882
Os04g21800



883
Os10g23840



884
Os08g13850



885
Os12g42980



886
Os03g29280



887
Os03g20650



888
Os06g43920










Tissue-enhanced promoters that may be used to drive expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides found in the Sequence Listing and structurally and functionally-related sequences have also been described in U.S. patent publication no. 20110179520A1, incorporated herein by reference. Such promoters include, but are not limited to, Arabidopsis sequences located in the promoter regions of AT1G08465, AT1G10155, AT1G14190, AT1G24130, AT1G24735, AT1G29270, AT1G30950, AT1G31310, AT1G37140, AT1G49320, AT1G49475, AT1G52100, AT1G60540, AT1G60630, AT1G64625, AT1G65150, AT1G68480, AT1G68780, AT1G69180, AT1G77145, AT1G80580, AT2G03500, AT2G17950, AT2G19910, AT2G27250, AT2G33880, AT2G39850, AT3G02500, AT3G12750, AT3G15170, AT3G16340, AT3G27920, AT3G30340, AT3G42670, AT3G44970, AT3G49950, AT3G50870, AT3G54990, AT3G59270, AT4G00180, AT4G00480, AT4G12450, AT4G14819, AT4G31610, AT4G31615, AT4G31620, AT4G31805, AT4G31877, AT4G36060, AT4G36470, AT4G36850, AT4G37970, AT5G03840, AT5G12330, AT5G14070, AT5G16410, AT5G20740, AT5G27690, AT5G35770, AT5G39330, AT5G42655, AT5G53210, AT5G56530, AT5G58780, AT5G61070, and AT5G6491.


In addition to the sequences provided in the Sequence Listing or in this Example, a promoter region may include a fragment of the promoter sequences provided in the Sequence Listing or in this Example, or a complement thereof, wherein the promoter sequence, or the fragment thereof, or the complement thereof, regulates expression of a polypeptide in a plant cell, for example, in response to a biotic or abiotic stress, or in a manner that is enhanced or preferred in certain plant tissues.


(2) Knock-Out/Knock-Down


In some cases, lines mutated in a given regulatory protein may be analyzed. Where available, T-DNA insertion lines in a given gene are isolated and characterized. In cases where a T-DNA insertion line is unavailable, an RNA interference (RNAi) strategy is sometimes used.


Example III
Transformation Methods

Crop species that overexpress polypeptides of the instant description may produce plants with increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency and/or yield. Thus, polynucleotide sequences listed in the Sequence Listing recombined into, for example, one of the expression vectors of the instant description, or another suitable expression vector, may be transformed into a plant for the purpose of modifying plant traits for the purpose of improving yield, quality, and/or photosynthetic resource use efficiency. The expression vector may contain a constitutive, tissue-enhanced or inducible promoter operably linked to the polynucleotide. The cloning vector may be introduced into a variety of plants by means well known in the art such as, for example, direct DNA transfer or Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation.


Transformation of Monocots.


Cereal plants including corn, wheat, rice, sorghum, barley, or other monocots may be transformed with the present polynucleotide sequences, including monocot or eudicot-derived sequences such as those presented in the present Tables, cloned into a vector such as pGA643 and containing a kanamycin-resistance marker, and expressed constitutively under, for example, the CaMV35S or COR15 promoters, or with tissue-enhanced or inducible promoters. The expression vectors may be one found in the Sequence Listing, or any other suitable expression vector may be similarly used. For example, pMENO20 may be modified to replace the NptII coding region with the BAR gene of Streptomyces hygroscopicus that confers resistance to phosphinothricin. The KpnI and BglII sites of the Bar gene are removed by site-directed mutagenesis with silent codon changes.


The cloning vector may be introduced into a variety of cereal plants by means well known in the art including direct DNA transfer or Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation. The latter approach may be accomplished by a variety of means, including, for example, that of U.S. Pat. No. 5,591,616, in which monocotyledon callus is transformed by contacting dedifferentiating tissue with the Agrobacterium containing the cloning vector.


The sample tissues are immersed in a suspension of 3×10−9 cells of Agrobacterium containing the cloning vector for 3-10 minutes. The callus material is cultured on solid medium at 25° C. in the dark for several days. The calli grown on this medium are transferred to a Regeneration Medium. Transfers are continued every two to three weeks (two or three times) until shoots develop. Shoots are then transferred to Shoot-Elongation Medium every 2-3 weeks. Healthy looking shoots are transferred to Rooting Medium and after roots have developed, the plants are placed into moist potting soil.


The transformed plants are then analyzed for the presence of the NPTII gene/kanamycin resistance by ELISA, using the ELISA NPTII kit from SPrime-3Prime Inc. (Boulder, Colo.).


It is also routine to use other methods to produce transgenic plants of most cereal crops (Vasil, 1994. Plant Mol. Biol. 25: 925-937) such as corn, wheat, rice, sorghum (Cassas et al., 1993. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90: 11212-11216), and barley (Wan and Lemeaux, 1994. Plant Physiol. 104: 37-48). DNA transfer methods such as the microprojectile method can be used for corn (Fromm et al., 1990. Bio/Technol. 8: 833-839; Gordon-Kamm et al., 1990. Plant Cell 2: 603-618; Ishida, 1990. Nature Biotechnol. 14:745-750), wheat (Vasil et al., 1992. Bio/Technol. 10:667-674; Vasil et al., 1993. Bio/Technol. 11:1553-1558; Weeks et al., 1993. Plant Physiol. 102:1077-1084), and rice (Christou, 1991. Bio/Technol. 9:957-962; Hiei et al., 1994. Plant J. 6:271-282; Aldemita and Hodges, 1996. Planta 199: 612-617; and Hiei et al., 1997. Plant Mol. Biol. 35:205-218). For most cereal plants, embryogenic cells derived from immature scutellum tissues are the preferred cellular targets for transformation (Hiei et al., 1997. supra; Vasil, 1994. supra). For transforming corn embryogenic cells derived from immature scutellar tissue using microprojectile bombardment, the A188XB73 genotype is the preferred genotype (Fromm et al., 1990. Bio/Technol. 8: 833-839; Gordon-Kamm et al., 1990. supra). After microprojectile bombardment the tissues are selected on phosphinothricin to identify the transgenic embryogenic cells (Gordon-Kamm et al., 1990. supra). Transgenic plants from transformed host plant cells may be regenerated by standard corn regeneration techniques (Fromm et al., 1990. Bio/Technol. 8: 833-839; Gordon-Kamm et al., 1990. supra).


Transformation of Dicots.


It is now routine to produce transgenic plants using most eudicot plants (see U.S. Pat. No. 8,273,954 (Rogers et al.) issued Sep. 25, 2012; Weissbach and Weissbach, 1989. Methods for Plant Molecular Biology, Academic Press; Gelvin et al., 1990. Plant Molecular Biology Manual, Kluwer Academic Publishers; Herrera-Estrella et al., 1983. Nature 303: 209; Bevan, 1984. Nucleic Acids Res. 12: 8711-8721; and Klee, 1985. Bio/Technology 3: 637-642). Methods for analysis of traits are routine in the art and examples are disclosed above.


Numerous protocols for the transformation of tomato and soy plants have been previously described, and are well known in the art. Gruber et al., in Glick and Thompson, 1993. Methods in Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology. eds., CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, describe several expression vectors and culture methods that may be used for cell or tissue transformation and subsequent regeneration. For soybean transformation, methods are described by Miki et al., 1993. in Methods in Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, p. 67-88, Glick and Thompson, eds., CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,055, (Townsend and Thomas), issued Oct. 8, 1996.


There are a substantial number of alternatives to Agrobacterium-mediated transformation protocols, other methods for the purpose of transferring exogenous genes into soybeans or tomatoes. One such method is microprojectile-mediated transformation, in which DNA on the surface of microprojectile particles is driven into plant tissues with a biolistic device (see, for example, Sanford et al., 1987. Part. Sci. Technol. 5:27-37; Sanford, 1993. Methods Enzymol. 217: 483-509; Christou et al., 1992. Plant. J. 2: 275-281; Klein et al., 1987. Nature 327: 70-73; U.S. Pat. No. 5,015,580 (Christou et al), issued May 14, 1991; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,322,783 (Tomes et al.), issued Jun. 21, 1994).


Alternatively, sonication methods (see, for example, Zhang et al., 1991. Bio/Technology 9: 996-997); direct uptake of DNA into protoplasts using CaCl2 precipitation, polyvinyl alcohol or poly-L-ornithine (see, for example, Hain et al., 1985. Mol. Gen. Genet. 199: 161-168; Draper et al., 1982. Plant Cell Physiol. 23: 451-458); liposome or spheroplast fusion (see, for example, Deshayes et al., 1985. EMBO J., 4: 2731-2737; Christou et al., 1987. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84: 3962-3966); and electroporation of protoplasts and whole cells and tissues (see, for example, Donn et al. 1990. in Abstracts of VIIth International Congress on Plant Cell and Tissue Culture IAPTC, A2-38: 53; D'Halluin et al., 1992. Plant Cell 4: 1495-1505; and Spencer et al., 1994. Plant Mol. Biol. 24: 51-61) have been used to introduce foreign DNA and expression vectors into plants.


After a plant or plant cell is transformed (and the transformed host plant cell then regenerated into a plant), the transformed plant may propagated vegetatively or it may be crossed with itself or a plant from the same line, a non-transformed or wild-type plant, or another transformed plant from a different transgenic line of plants. Crossing provides the advantages of producing new and often stable transgenic varieties. Genes and the traits they confer that have been introduced into a tomato or soybean line may be moved into distinct line of plants using traditional backcrossing techniques well known in the art. Transformation of tomato plants may be conducted using the protocols of Koornneef et al, 1986. In Tomato Biotechnology: Alan R. Liss, Inc., 169-178, and in U.S. Pat. No. 6,613,962, the latter method described in brief here. Eight day old cotyledon explants are precultured for 24 hours in Petri dishes containing a feeder layer of Petunia hybrida suspension cells plated on MS medium with 2% (w/v) sucrose and 0.8% agar supplemented with 10 μM α-naphthalene acetic acid and 4.4 μM 6-benzylaminopurine. The explants are then infected with a diluted overnight culture of Agrobacterium tumefaciens containing an expression vector comprising a polynucleotide of the instant description for 5-10 minutes, blotted dry on sterile filter paper and cocultured for 48 hours on the original feeder layer plates. Culture conditions are as described above. Overnight cultures of Agrobacterium tumefaciens are diluted in liquid MS medium with 2% (w/v/) sucrose, pH 5.7, to an OD600 of 0.8.


Following cocultivation, the cotyledon explants are transferred to Petri dishes with selective medium comprising MS medium with 4.56 μM zeatin, 67.3 μM vancomycin, 418.9 μM cefotaxime and 171.6 μM kanamycin sulfate, and cultured under the culture conditions described above. The explants are subcultured every three weeks onto fresh medium. Emerging shoots are dissected from the underlying callus and transferred to glass jars with selective medium without zeatin to form roots. The formation of roots in a kanamycin sulfate-containing medium is a positive indication of a successful transformation.


Transformation of soybean plants may be conducted using the methods found in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,055 (Townsend et al., issued Oct. 8, 1996), described in brief here. In this method soybean seed is surface sterilized by exposure to chlorine gas evolved in a glass bell jar. Seeds are germinated by plating on 1/10 strength agar solidified medium without plant growth regulators and culturing at 28° C. with a 16 hour day length. After three or four days, seed may be prepared for cocultivation. The seedcoat is removed and the elongating radicle removed 3-4 mm below the cotyledons.



Eucalyptus is now considered an important crop that is grown for example to provide feedstocks for the pulp and paper and biofuel markets. This species is also amenable to transformation as described in PCT patent publication WO/2005/032241.



Crambe has been recognized as a high potential oilseed crop that may be grown for the production of high value oils. An efficient method for transformation of this species has been described in PCT patent publication WO 2009/067398 A1.


Overnight cultures of Agrobacterium tumefaciens harboring the expression vector comprising a polynucleotide of the instant description are grown to log phase, pooled, and concentrated by centrifugation. Inoculations are conducted in batches such that each plate of seed was treated with a newly resuspended pellet of Agrobacterium. The pellets are resuspended in 20 ml inoculation medium. The inoculum is poured into a Petri dish containing prepared seed and the cotyledonary nodes are macerated with a surgical blade. After 30 minutes the explants are transferred to plates of the same medium that has been solidified. Explants are embedded with the adaxial side up and level with the surface of the medium and cultured at 22° C. for three days under white fluorescent light. These plants may then be regenerated according to methods well established in the art, such as by moving the explants after three days to a liquid counter-selection medium (see U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,055).


The explants may then be picked, embedded and cultured in solidified selection medium. After one month on selective media transformed tissue becomes visible as green sectors of regenerating tissue against a background of bleached, less healthy tissue. Explants with green sectors are transferred to an elongation medium. Culture is continued on this medium with transfers to fresh plates every two weeks. When shoots are 0.5 cm in length they may be excised at the base and placed in a rooting medium.


Experimental Methods; Transformation of Arabidopsis.


Transformation of Arabidopsis is performed by an Agrobacterium-mediated protocol based on the method of Bechtold and Pelletier, 1998. Unless otherwise specified, all experimental work is performed using the Columbia ecotype.


Plant Preparation.



Arabidopsis seeds are gas sterilized and sown on plates with media containing 80% MS with vitamins, 0.3% sucrose and 1% Bacto™ agar. The plates are placed at 4° in the dark for the days then transferred to 24 hour light at 22° for 7 days. After 7 days the seedlings are transplanted to soil, placing individual seedlings in each pot. The primary bolts are cut off a week before transformation to break apical dominance and encourage auxiliary shoots to form. Transformation is typically performed at 4-5 weeks after sowing.


Bacterial Culture Preparation.



Agrobacterium stocks are inoculated from single colony plates or from glycerol stocks and grown with the appropriate antibiotics until saturation. On the morning of transformation, the saturated cultures are centrifuged and bacterial pellets are re-suspended in Infiltration Media (0.5×MS, 1× Gamborg's Vitamins, 5% sucrose, 200 μl/L Silwet® L77) until an A600 reading of 0.8 is reached.


Transformation and Harvest of Transgenic Seeds.


The Agrobacterium solution is poured into dipping containers. All flower buds and rosette leaves of the plants are immersed in this solution for 30 seconds. The plants are laid on their side and wrapped to keep the humidity high. The plants are kept this way overnight at 22° C. and then the pots are turned upright, unwrapped, and moved to the growth racks. In most cases, the transformation process is repeated one week later to increase transformation efficiency.


The plants are maintained on the growth rack under 24-hour light until seeds are ready to be harvested. Seeds are harvested when 80% of the siliques of the transformed plants are ripe (approximately five weeks after the initial transformation). This seed is deemed To seed, since it is obtained from the To generation, and is later plated on selection plates (either kanamycin or sulfonamide). Resistant plants that are identified on such selection plates comprise the T1 generation, from which transgenic seed comprising an expression vector of interest may be derived.


Example IV
Primary Screening Materials and Methods

Plant Growth Conditions.


Seeds from Arabidopsis lines are chlorine gas sterilized using a standard protocol and spread onto plates containing a sucrose-based media augmented with vitamins (80% MS+Vit, 1% sucrose, 0.65% PhytoBlend™ Agar; Caisson Laboratories, Inc., North Logan, Utah) and appropriate kanamycin or sulfonamide concentrations where selection is required. Seeds are stratified in the dark on plates, at 4° C. for 3 days then moved to a walk-in growth chamber (Conviron MTW120, Conviron Controlled Environments Ltd, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) running at a 10 hour photoperiod at a photosynthetic photon flux of approximately 200 μmol m−2 s−1 at plant height and a photoperiod/night temperature regime of 22° C./19° C. After seven days of light exposure seedlings are transplanted into 164 ml volume pots containing autoclaved ProMix® soil. All pots are returned to the same growth-chamber where they are stood in water and covered with a lid for the first seven days. This protocol keeps the soil moist during this period. Seven days after transplanting lids are removed and a watering and nutrition regime begun. All plants receive water three times a week, and a weekly a fertilizer treatment (80% Peter's NPK fertilizer).


Primary Screening.


Between 35 and 38 days after being transferred to lighted conditions on plates, and after between 28 and 31 days growth in soil, a suite of leaf-physiological parameters are measured using an infrared gas analyzer (LI-6400XT, LI-COR® Biosciences, Lincoln, NB, USA) integrated with a fluorimeter that measures fluorescence from Chlorophyll A (LI-6400-40, LI-COR Biosciences). This technique involves clamping a leaf between two gaskets, effectively sealing it inside a chamber, then measuring the exchange of carbon dioxide and water vapor between the leaf and the air flowing through the chamber. This gas exchange is monitored simultaneously with the fluorescence levels from the chlorophyll a molecules in the leaf. The growth conditions used, and plant age and leaf selection criteria for measurement are designed to maximize the chance that the leaves sampled fill the 2 cm2 leaf chamber of the gas-exchange system and that plants show no visible signs of having transitioned to reproductive growth.


Screening High-Light Leaf Physiology at Two Air Temperatures.


Leaf physiology is screened after plants have been acclimated to high light (700 μmol photons m−2 s−1) under LED light banks emitting visible light (400-700 nm, Photon Systems Instruments, Brno, Czech Republic), for 40 minutes. Other than the change in light level, the atmospheric environment is the same as that in which the plants have been grown, and the LI-6400 leaf chamber is set to reflect this, being set to deliver a photosynthetic photon flux of 700 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and operate at an air temperature of 22° C. Forty minutes acclimation to a photosynthetic photon flux of 700 μmol photons m−2 s−1 has repeatedly been shown to be sufficient to achieve a steady-state rate of light-saturated photosynthesis and stomatal conductance in control plants. Gas exchange and fluorescence data are logged simultaneously two minutes after the leaf has been closed in the chamber. Two minutes is found to be long enough for the leaf chamber CO2 and H2O concentrations to stabilize after closing a new leaf inside, and thereby minimizing leaf physiological adjustment to small differences between the growth environment and the LI-6400 chamber. Screening at the growth air temperature of 22° C. is begun one hour into the photoperiod and is typically completed in two hours. After being screened at 22° C., plants are returned to growth-light levels prior to being screened again at 35° C. later in the photoperiod. The higher-temperature screening begins six hours into the photoperiod and measurements are made after the rosettes have been acclimated to the same high light dose as described above, but this time in a controlled environment with an air temperature set to 35° C. Measurements are again made in a leaf chamber set to match the warmer air temperature and logged using the protocol described above for the 22° C. measurements. Data generated at both 22° C. and 35° C. are used to calculate: rates of CO2 assimilation by photosynthesis (A, μmol CO2 m−2 s−1); rates of H2O loss through transpiration (Tr, mmol H2O m−2 s−1); the conductance to CO2 and H2O movement between the leaf and air through the stomatal pore (gs, mol. H2O m−2 s−1); the sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci, μml CO2 mol−1); transpiration efficiency, the instantaneous ratio of photosynthesis to transpiration, (TE=A/Tr (μmol CO2 mmol H2O m−2 s−1)); the rate of electron flow through photosystem two (ETR e−m−2 s−1). Derivation of the parameters described above followed established published protocols (Long & Bernacchi, 2003. J. Exp. Botany; 54:2393-24)


Leaves from up to 10 replicate plants are screened for a given line of interest. Data generated from these lines are compared with that from an empty vector control line planted at the same time, grown within the same flats, and screened at the same time.


For control lines, data are collected not only at an atmospheric CO2 concentration of 400 μmol CO2 mol−1, but also after stepwise changes in CO2 concentration to 350, 300, 450 and 500 μmol CO2mol−1. These measurements underlay screening for more complex physiological traits of: (1) photosynthetic capacity; (2) Non-photochemical quenching; and (3) non-photosynthetic metabolism.


Screening Photosynthetic Capacity.


Under most conditions, the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis in a C3 leaf is a product of the biochemical capacity of the Calvin cycle and the transfer conductance of CO2 concentration to the sites of carboxylation (Farquhar et al., 1980. Planta: 149, 78-90). Plotting the rate of photosynthesis against an estimate of the sub-stomatal CO2 concentration (Ci) provides a means to identify changes in photosynthetic capacity of the Calvin cycle independent of changes in stomatal conductance, a key component of the total transfer conductance to CO2 of the leaf. Consequently, for lines being screened, rates of photosynthesis are plotted against a regression plot of A vs. Ci generated for the control lines over a range of atmospheric CO2 concentration, as described above. This technique enables visual confirmation of changes in photosynthetic capacity in lines of interest.


Screening Non-Photochemical Quenching.


During acclimation to high light, the efficiency with which photosystem PSII operates will reach a steady state regulated largely by the feedback between non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) in the antenna and the metabolic demand for energy produced in the chloroplast (Genty et al., 1989. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 990:87-92; Baker et al., 2007. Plant Cell Environ. 30:1107-1125). This understanding is used in this screen to identify lines in which the limitation that non-photochemical quenching exerts on the efficiency with which photosystem II operates is decreased or increased. A decrease in non-photochemical quenching may be the consequence of a decrease in the capacity for NPQ. This would result in lower levels of non-photochemical quenching and a higher efficiency of photosynthesis over a range of light levels, but importantly, higher rates of photosynthesis at low light where light-use efficiency is important. However, changes in rate at which NPQ responds to light could also underlie any increases or decreases in NPQ. Of these, an increase in the rate at which NPQ relaxes has the potential to increase rates of photosynthesis as leaves in crop canopies transition from high to low light, and is therefore relevant to increasing crop-canopy photosynthesis (Zhu et al., 2010. Plant Biol. 61:235-261). In keeping with the A/Ci analysis described above, a regression of the operating efficiency of PSII against non-photochemical quenching is generated for the control line from data collected over a range of atmospheric CO2 concentration. This technique enables visual confirmation of changes in the regulation of PSII operation that are driven by changes in non-photochemical quenching in lines of interest.


Screening for Non-Photosynthetic Metabolism.


Measurement of the ratio of the rate of electron flow through PSII (ETR) to the rate of photosynthesis (A) is used to screen for changes in non-photosynthetic metabolism. This screen is based upon the understanding that the transport of four μmol of electrons from PSII to photosystem one PSI will supply the NADPH and ATP required to fix one μmol of CO2 in the Calvin cycle. For a C3 leaf operating in an atmosphere with 21% oxygen, the ratio of electron flow to photosynthesis should be higher than four, reflecting photorespiratory and other metabolism. However, because the rate of photorespiration in a C3 leaf is dependent upon the concentration of CO2 at the active site of Rubisco, a regression of the ratio of electron flow to photosynthesis, generated over the range of CO2 concentrations described above, provides the reference regression against which lines being screened can be compared to controls. Changes in the ratio of ETR to A, when observed at the same Ci as the control line, could indicate changes in the specificity of the Rubisco active site for O2 relative to CO2 and or other metabolic sinks which would be expected to have important implications for crop productivity and/or stress tolerance.


Surrogate Screening for Growth-Light Physiology.


Rosette biomass: the dry weight of whole Arabidopsis rosettes (i.e., above-ground biomass) is measured after being dried down at 80° C. for 24 hours, a time found to be sufficient to reach constant weight. Samples are taken after 35-38 days growth, and used as an assay of above-ground productivity at growth light. Typically, five replicate rosettes are sampled per Arabidopsis line being screened.


Rosette chemical and isotopic C and N analysis: after weighing, the five rosettes sampled for each line screened are pooled together and ground to a fine powder. The pooled sample generated is sub-sampled and approximately 4 μg samples are prepared for analysis.


Chlorophyll content index (CCI): measurements of light transmission through the leaf are made for plants being screened using a chlorophyll content meter (CCM-200, Apogee Instruments, Logan, Utah, USA). The first is made within the first hour of the photoperiod prior to any acclimation to high light on leaves of plants samples for rosette analysis. The second is made later in the photoperiod on leaves of plants that had undergone the high-temperature screening.


Light absorption: measurements of CCI are used as a surrogate for leaf light absorption, based upon a known relationship between the two. The estimates of light absorption by the leaf, required to construct this relationship, were made by placing the leaf on top of a quantum sensor (LI-190, LI-COR Biosciences) with both the leaf and quantum sensor then pressed firmly up to the foam gasket underneath the LI-6400 light source. This procedure provides an estimate of the transmission of a known light flux through the leaf and is used to estimate the fraction of light absorbed by the leaf.


Example V
Experimental Results

This Example provides experimental observations for transgenic plants overexpressing AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 related polypeptides assayed for improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency.


The ability of a crop canopy to photosynthesize, and the rate at which it can do this relative to the availability of resources, is an important determinant of crop yield. Consequently, increasing the rate of photosynthesis relative to resources that can limit productivity and yield is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres.


The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is a key determinant of the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to resources required for plant growth. The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is the product of plant resource investment in numerous pigments and proteins required to absorb light and couple it to the enzymatic reduction of carbon in the air to sugars, in the chloroplast. This capacity for photosynthesis sets limits upon the rate of photosynthesis that can be achieved by a leaf, and ultimately the yield potential of crops. Consequently, increasing photosynthetic capacity is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres.


Tables 23-35 and the instant Figures provide evidence for improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1,


GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 in experiments conducted to date. All experimental observations of greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency were made by comparison to control plants (e.g., plants that did not comprise a recombinant construct encoding an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24-related polypeptide or overexpress an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade or phylogenetically-related regulatory protein). Where a numerical value was determined, the percentage increases (+%) or decreases (−%) relative to control plants are shown in parentheses.


Table 23 describes an increased capacity for photosynthesis and increased photosynthetic rate in five independent lines overexpressing AtMYB27. Table 23 describes increased photosynthesis in five out of six independent lines overexpressing MYB27. When averaged for these five MYB27 overexpression lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 23%. Table 5 also details how for four of these MYB27 overexpression lines this increase in photosynthetic rate is clearly linked to an increase in capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the activity of Rubisco and the capacity to regenerate RuBP in the Calvin cycle are key constraints. FIGS. 3 and 4 display evidence of increases in both Rubisco activity and the capacity to regenerate RuBP in multiple MYB27 overexpression lines (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for assaying Rubisco activity and RuBP regeneration capacity). For lines 1, 2 and 6, both the activity of Rubisco and the capacity to regenerate RuBP were increased by MYB27 overexpression. For line 5, only an increase in the capacity for RuBP regeneration was observed. Photosynthetic resource use efficiency was also increased in five of the six lines assayed. When averaged for these five lines, the 23% increase in photosynthetic rate was observed in tandem with a smaller, 13% increase in the nitrogen content of the rosette tissue.









TABLE 23







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in AtMYB27 overexpression lines. Effects and relative


effect size are displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis) and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette


[N]). Effects on photosynthetic capacity are also described and where known the biochemical basis for the effect


is described as either due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ



Photosynthetic
Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
Capacity
[N]





AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 1



(43%)
Rubisco and
(25%)







RuBP


AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 2



(30%)
Rubisco and
(30%)







RuBP


AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
No effect
No effect
No effect


Line 3


AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
Increased
No effect
Increased


Line 4



(14%)

(8%)


AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
Increased
Increased
No effect


Line 5



(8%)
RuBP


AtMYB27/
2
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1311
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 6



(20%)
Rubisco and
(3%)







RuBP









The results presented in Table 23 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Lines 1 and 2 were screened twice and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the two screening runs. For both lines the direction of the effect was the same in both runs. Lines 3, 4, 5 and 6 were screened once.


Table 24 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing RBP45A in experiments conducted to date. Table 24 describes increased photosynthesis in five out of six independent lines overexpressing RBP45A. When averaged for these six lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 11% in the RBP45A overexpression lines. Leaf chlorophyll absorbs light energy utilized for photosynthesis, and was increased by 5% when average across all six lines. Rosette nitrogen content was reduced by 3% in the five lines for which it was measured. That photosynthesis is increased in RBP45A overexpression lines to a greater extent than the investment in chlorophyll, while rosette nitrogen content is decreased, provides evidence that RBP45A overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to availability of the key resources of light and nitrogen.









TABLE 24







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in RBP45A overexpression lines. Effects and relative effect size are


displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), leaf chlorophyll content and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette [N]).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ



Leaf
Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
[N]





RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Increased
Increased
No effect


Line 1



(15%)
(8%)
(<1%)


RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Increased
Decreased



Line 2



(12%)
(10%)


RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 3



(11%)
(4%)
(3%)


RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 4



(14%)
(16%)
(4%)


RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Increased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 5



(15%)
(1%)
(5%)


RBP45A/
42
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1940
Decreased
Increased
Increased


Line 6



(3%)
(11%)
(1%)









The results presented in Table 24 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Photosynthetic rate and leaf chlorophyll were screened in two independent experiments for lines 1, and 3, and the effect size reported for is the mean of the two screening runs. The direction of the effect was the same in each screening run. Lines 2, 4, 5, and 6 were screened once. Rosette nitrogen data was collected in one experiment.


Table 25 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing TCP6 in experiments conducted to date. Table 25 describes increased photosynthesis in eight independent lines overexpressing TCP6. When averaged for these eight lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 14% in the TCP6 overexpression lines. Leaf chlorophyll absorbs light energy utilized for photosynthesis, and was increased by 17% across the eight lines studied. Leaf chlorophyll and photosynthetic enyzmes are a major sink for plant nitrogen. However, rosette nitrogen content increased by only 3% when averaged across the six lines for which data is available in Table 7. That photosynthesis and leaf chlorophyll content can be increased with negligible effects on rosette nitrogen content is evidence that TCP6 overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to nitrogen availability.


All experimental observations of greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency were made by comparison to control plants (e.g., plants that did not comprise a recombinant construct encoding a TCP6 related polypeptide or overexpress a TCP6 clade or phylogenetically-related regulatory protein). Where a numerical value was determined, the percentage increases (+%) or decreases (−%) relative to control plants are shown in parentheses.









TABLE 25







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in TCP6 overexpression lines. Effects and relative effect size are


displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), leaf chlorophyll content and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette [N]).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ



Leaf
Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
[N]





TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 1



(9%)
(10%)
(2%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 2



(14%)
(15%)
(4%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 3



(10%)
(17%)
(18%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 4



(19%)
(14%)
(4%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
No effect


Line 5



(20%)
(10%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 6



(17%)
(24%)
(4%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased



Line 7



(21%)
(42%)


TCP6/
86
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1936
Increased
Increased



Line 8



(3%)
(6%)









The results presented in Table 25 were determined after screening eight independent transgenic events. Lines 1, 2 and 3 were screened in three independent experiments and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the three screening runs. Lines 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 were screened once.


Table 26 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing PIL1 in experiments conducted to date. Table 26 describes increased photosynthesis in six independent lines overexpressing PILL When averaged for these six lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 15% in the PIL1 overexpression lines. Leaf chlorophyll absorbs light energy utilized for photosynthesis, and was decreased by 2% across three lines for which data was collected. Rosette nitrogen content was increased by 1% in the same three lines. That photosynthesis could be increased in PIL1 overexpression lines while decreasing investment in chlorophyll and for a much smaller relative increase in nitrogen is evidence that PIL1 overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to availability of the key resources of light and nitrogen.


All experimental observations of greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency were made by comparison to control plants (e.g., plants that did not comprise a recombinant construct encoding a PIL1-related polypeptide or overexpress a PIL1 clade or phylogenetically-related regulatory protein). Where a numerical value was determined, the percentage increases (+%) or decreases (−%) relative to control plants are shown in parentheses.









TABLE 26







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in PIL1 overexpression lines. Effects and relative effect size are


displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), leaf chlorophyll content and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette [N]).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ



Leaf
Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
[N]





PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 1



(17%)
(2%)
(3%)


PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 2



(9%)
(6%)
(2%)


PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased
Decreased
Increased


Line 3



(16%)
(4%)
(3%)


PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased




Line 4



(23%)


PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased




Line 5



(19%)


PIL1/
108
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1649
Increased




Line 6



(18%)









The results presented in Table 26 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Photosynthetic rate was screened in two independent experiments for lines 1, and 2, and the effect size reported for is the mean of the two screening runs. The direction of the effect was the same in each screening run. Lines 3, 4, 5, and 6 were screened once.


Table 27 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing PCL1 in experiments conducted to date.


The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is a key determinant of the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to resources required for plant growth. The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is the product of plant resource investment in numerous pigments and proteins required to absorb light and couple it to the enzymatic reduction of carbon in the air, to sugars in the chloroplast.


This capacity for photosynthesis sets limits upon the rate of photosynthesis that can be achieved by a leaf, and ultimately the yield potential of crops. Consequently, increasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. Table 27 describes increased photosynthesis in four out of five independent lines overexpressing PCL1. When averaged for these five lines photosynthetic rate was increased by 14% in the PCL1 overexpression lines. Table 27 also details how for four of these PCL1 overexpression lines this increase in photosynthetic rate is observed in lines that also displayed an increase in the capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the activity of Rubisco is a key constraint. FIG. 13 displays evidence of increased in both Rubisco activity in four out of five PCL1 overexpression lines (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for assaying Rubisco activity and RuBP regeneration capacity).









TABLE 27







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in PCL1 overexpression lines. The effects


and relative effect size is displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis) Effects on photosynthetic


capacity are also described and where known the biochemical basis for the effect is described as either


due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).












Polypeptide
SEQ


Photo-
Photosynthetic


Sequence/Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
synthesis
Capacity





PCL1/Line 1
126
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G2741
Increased
Increased






(16%)
Rubisco


PCL1/Line 2
126
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G2741
Increased
Increased






(30%)
Rubisco


PCL1/Line 3
126
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G2741
Increased
Increased






(9%)
Rubisco


PCL1/Line 4
126
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G2741
Decreased
No effect






(3%)


PCL1/Line 5
126
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G2741
Increased
Increased






(17%)
Rubisco









The results presented in Table 27 were determined after screening five independent transgenic events. Lines 1 and 2 were screened three times, lines 3, 4 and 5 were screened twice. For all lines the effect size shown is the mean of the individual effects recorded in each independent screening run.


Table 28 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing GTL1 in experiments conducted to date. The ability of a crop canopy to photosynthesize, and the rate at which it can do this relative to the availability of resources, is an important determinant of crop yield. Consequently, increasing the rate of photosynthesis relative to resources that can limit productivity and yield is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. Table 28 describes an increase in leaf photosynthetic rate in GTL1 overexpression lines for plants that had decreased leaf chlorophyll content and rosette nitrogen concentration. When averaged for the four lines studied, photosynthetic rate was increased by 12% and leaf chlorophyll content decreased by 20%. Rosette nitrogen content was decreased by 6%, when averaged over the three out of the four lines for which it was measured. Increasing photosynthesis while decreasing both chlorophyll and nitrogen in the rosette provides evidence that GTL1 overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to availability of the key resources of light and nitrogen. This combination of phenotypes would be expected to increase light-limited photosynthesis in the crop canopy while providing protection against photodamage to the photosynthetic apparatus, associated with excess light absorption, in upper canopy leaves.









TABLE 28







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in GTL1 overexpression


lines. Effects and relative effect size are displayed for leaf chlorophyll content, photosynthetic


rate (photosynthesis) and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette [N]).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ


Leaf

Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Chlorophyll
Photosynthesis
[N]





GTL1/
156
prRBCS4::LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G634
Decreased
Increased
Decreased


Line 1

Col_Wt

(18%)
(10%)
(7%)


GTL1/
156
prRBCS4::LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G634
Decreased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 2

Col_Wt

(12%)
(3%)
(6%)


GTL1/
156
prRBCS4::LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G634
Decreased
Increased
Decreased


Line 3

Col_Wt

(22%)
(14%)
(5%)


GTL1/
156
prRBCS4::LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G634
Decreased
Increased



Line 4

Col Wt

(26%)
(22%)









The results presented in Table 28 were determined after screening four independent transgenic events. Lines 1 and 3 were screened twice, and the effect shown is the mean of the effect observed in both experiments. Lines 2 and 4 were screened once.


Table 29 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing DREB2H in experiments conducted to date. Table 29 describes a decrease in leaf chlorophyll in G1755 overexpression lines that has no effect on photosynthetic rate. When averaged for the six lines studied, leaf chlorophyll content was decreased by 19%, while photosynthetic rate was increased by 2%.


Increasing photosynthesis while decreasing chlorophyll provides evidence that DREB2H overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to light availability. This combination of phenotypes would be expected to increase light-limited photosynthesis in the crop canopy while providing protection against photodamage to the photosynthetic apparatus, associated with excess light absorption, in upper canopy leaves.


All experimental observations of greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency were made by comparison to control plants (e.g., plants that did not comprise a recombinant construct encoding a DREB2H-related polypeptide or overexpress a DREB2H clade or phylogenetically-related regulatory protein). Where a numerical value was determined, the percentage increases (+%) or decreases (−%) relative to control plants are shown in parentheses.









TABLE 29







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in DREB2H overexpression lines. Effects and


relative effect size are displayed for leaf chlorophyll content and photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis).












Polypeptide
SEQ


Leaf
Photo-


Sequence/Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Chlorophyll
synthesis





DREB2H/Line 1
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
Increased




Col_Wt

(18%)
(6%)


DREB2H/Line 2
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
No effect




Col_Wt

(19%)
(<1%)


DREB2H/Line 3
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
Decreased




Col_Wt

(17%)
(9%)


DREB2H/Line 4
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
Decreased




Col_Wt

(21%)
(9%)


DREB2H/Line 5
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
Increased




Col_Wt

(14%)
(32%)


DREB2H/Line 6
192
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G1755
Decreased
Increased




Col_Wt

(24%)
(4%)









The results presented in Table 29 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Lines 2 and 3 were screened twice, and the effect shown is the mean of the effect observed in both experiments. Lines 1, 4, 5 and 6 were screened once.



FIGS. 20 and 21 detail indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing ERF087 in experiments conducted to date.


The ability of a crop canopy to photosynthesize, and the rate at which it can do this relative to the availability of resources, is an important determinant of crop yield. Consequently, increasing the rate of photosynthesis relative to resources that can limit productivity and yield is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. FIGS. 20 and 21 show lower levels of non-photochemical quenching in five out of six ERF087 overexpression lines, as plants acclimated to a sudden increase in light incident on the leaves. The decrease in the ERF087 overexpression lines was most pronounced for plants acclimated to an air temperature of 35° C. (FIG. 21), but was also seen for measurements made at a growth temperature of 22° C. (FIG. 20). Non-photochemical quenching is a term that covers a range of processes that collectively dissipate absorbed light energy as heat from the light harvesting antenna, and thereby regulating the supply of light energy to photosystem two. Decreasing non-photochemical quenching would be expected to increase the efficiency of light energy transfer to the photosynthetic reaction centers and increase the light-use efficiency of photosynthesis.


Table 30 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing BBX18 in experiments conducted to date.


The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is a key determinant of the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to resources required for plant growth. The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is the product of plant resource investment in numerous pigments and proteins required to absorb light and couple it to the enzymatic reduction of carbon in the air, to sugars in the chloroplast. This capacity for photosynthesis sets limits upon the rate of photosynthesis that can be achieved by a leaf, and ultimately the yield potential of crops. Consequently, increasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. Table 30 describes increased photosynthesis in six out of six independent lines overexpressing BBX18. When averaged for these six lines photosynthetic rate was increased by 28% in the BBX18 overexpression lines. Table 30 also details how for all six of these BBX18 overexpression lines this increase in photosynthetic rate is observed in with an increase in the capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the activity of Rubisco and the capacity to regenerate RuBP, in the Calvin cycle are key constraints. FIG. 24 displays evidence of an increase in both Rubisco activity and the capacity to regenerate RuBP in the three of the six BBX18 overexpression lines that were assayed for insights into the biochemical basis for increased photosynthetic capacity (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for assaying Rubisco activity and RuBP regeneration capacity). When averaged over the six lines assayed, the increase in photosynthetic capacity and photosynthetic rate observed in the BBX18 overexpression lines was achieved with no increase in leaf chlorophyll content, providing evidence of optimization of resources within the photosynthetic apparatus.









TABLE 30







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in BBX18 overexpression lines. The effects


and relative effect size is displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis) Effects on photosynthetic


capacity are also described and, where known the biochemical basis for the effect is described as either


due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).













Polypeptide





Chlorophyll


Sequence/
SEQ



Photosynthetic
Content


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
Capacity
Index





BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 1



(3%)

(7%)


BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 2



(16%)

(10%)


BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 3



(16%)

(6%)


BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 4



(30%)
Rubisco/RuBP
(8%)


BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 5



(72%)
Rubisco/RuBP
(5%)


BBX18/
278
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1881
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 6



(30%)
Rubisco/RuBP
(10%)









Table 31 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing bHLH60 in experiments conducted to date. Table 31 describes a decrease in leaf chlorophyll in bHLH60 overexpression lines that has no effect on photosynthetic rate. When averaged for the six lines studied, leaf chlorophyll content was decreased by 15%, while photosynthetic rate was decreased by 7%.


Decreasing chlorophyll provides evidence that bHLH60 overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to light availability. This combination of phenotypes would be expected to increase light-limited photosynthesis in the crop canopy while providing protection against photodamage to the photosynthetic apparatus, associated with excess light absorption, in upper canopy leaves.









TABLE 31







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in bHLH60 overexpression lines. Effects and


relative effect size are displayed for leaf chlorophyll content and photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis).












Polypeptide
SEQ


Leaf
Photo-


Sequence/Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Chlorophyll
synthesis





bHLH60/Line 1
318
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G2144
Decreased
Decreased




Col_Wt

(16%)
(8%)


bHLH60/Line 2
318
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G2144
Decreased
Increased




Col_Wt

(14%)
(2%)


bHLH60/Line 3
318
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G2144
Decreased
Decreased




Col_Wt

(17%)
(4%)


bHLH60/Line 4
318
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP,
opLexA::G2144
Decreased
Decreased




Col_Wt

(11%)
(17%)









The results presented in Table 31 were determined after screening four independent transgenic events. Line 1 and 2 were screened twice and the data presented is the mean of the results of those two experiments. Lines 3 and 4 were screened once.


Table 32 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing NF-YC6 in experiments conducted to date. Table 32 describes a decrease in leaf chlorophyll in NF-YC6 overexpression lines that has no effect on photosynthetic rate. When averaged for the five lines studied, leaf chlorophyll content was decreased by 13%, while photosynthetic rate was unaffected (<1% change). Rosette nitrogen content was measured for three of the five lines studied. Averaged for these three lines, rosette nitrogen content was decreased by 7% from 7.3 to 6.7% of rosette dry weight. Increasing photosynthesis while decreasing both chlorophyll and nitrogen in the rosette provides evidence that NF-YC6 overexpression improves the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to the availability of the key resources of light and nitrogen. This combination of phenotypes would be expected to increase light-limited photosynthesis in the crop canopy while providing protection against photodamage to the photosynthetic apparatus, associated with excess light absorption, in upper canopy leaves.









TABLE 32







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in NF-YC6 overexpression lines. Effects and relative effect size are


displayed for leaf chlorophyll content, photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis) and rosette nitrogen concentration (rosette [N]).













Polypeptide








Sequence/
SEQ


Leaf

Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Chlorophyll
Photosynthesis
[N]





NF-YC6/
356
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP,
opLexA::G1820
Decreased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 1

Col_Wt

(12%)
(2%)
(2%)


NF-YC6/
356
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP,
opLexA::G1820
Decreased
Increased
Decreased


Line 2

Col_Wt

(17%)
(8%)
(9%)


NF-YC6/
356
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP,
opLexA::G1820
Decreased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 3

Col_Wt

(11%)
(3%)
(11%)


NF-YC6/
356
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP,
opLexA::G1820
Decreased
No effect


Line 4

Col_Wt

(20%)
(<1%)


NF-YC6/
356
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP,
opLexA::G1820
Decreased
No effect


Line 5

Col_Wt

(4%)
(<1%)









The results presented in Table 32 were determined after screening five independent transgenic events. Lines 1, 2 and 3 were screened twice and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the two screening runs. Lines 4 and 5 were screened once.


Table 33 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing bHLH121 in experiments conducted to date.


The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is a key determinant of the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to resources required for plant growth. The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is the product of plant resource investment in numerous pigments and proteins required to absorb light and couple it to the enzymatic reduction of carbon in the air, to sugars in the chloroplast. This capacity for photosynthesis sets limits upon the rate of photosynthesis that can be achieved by a leaf, and ultimately the yield potential of crops. Consequently, increasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. Table 33 describes increased photosynthesis in five out of five independent lines overexpressing bHLH121. When averaged for these five bHLH121 overexpression lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 11%. Table 33 also details how for four of the five lines, the increase in photosynthetic rate is linked to an increase in capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the capacity to regenerate RuBP in the Calvin cycle is a key constraint. FIG. 31 displays evidence of an increase in the capacity to regenerate RuBP in four of the five bHLH121 overexpression lines (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for RuBP regeneration capacity). All the bHLH121 lines screened were grown in the same environment as the control lines, consequently the increase in photosynthetic capacity and photosynthetic rate observed has been achieved through an increase in photosynthetic resource-use efficiency in these lines.









TABLE 33







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in bHLH121 overexpression lines. Effects and


relative effect size are displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), photosynthetic capacity and


leaf chlorophyll content. Where known, the biochemical basis for increase in photosynthetic capacity is described


as either due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).













Polypeptide





Leaf


Sequence/
SEQ



Photosynthetic
Chlorophyll


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
capacity
content





bHLH121/
388
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G782
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 1



(18%)
RuBP
(21%)


bHLH121/
388
35S::m35S:oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA:: GFP
opLexA::G782
Increased
No effect
Increased


Line 2



(12%)

(18%)


bHLH121/
388
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G782
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 3



(8%)
RuBP
(8%)


bHLH121/
388
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G782
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 4



(2%)
RuBP
(9%)


bHLH121/
388
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G782
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 5



(14%)
RuBP
(21%)









The results presented in Table 33 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Lines 1 and 2 were screened twice and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the two screening runs. For both lines the direction of the effect was the same in both runs. Lines 3, 4 and 5 were screened once.


Table 34 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing BBX26 in experiments conducted to date. Table 34 describes increased photosynthesis in five out of five independent lines overexpressing BBX26 When averaged for these five BBX26 overexpression lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 14%. Table 34 also details how for all five lines, the increase in photosynthetic rate is linked to an increase in capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the capacity to regenerate RuBP in the Calvin cycle is a key constraint. FIG. 34 displays evidence of an increase in the capacity to regenerate RuBP in four of the five BBX26 overexpression lines (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for RuBP regeneration capacity). Photosynthetic resource use efficiency was also increased in lines overexpressing BBX26. When averaged for these five lines, the 14% increase in photosynthetic rate was observed in tandem with a 13% increase in leaf chlorophyll content, but also with an 8% decrease in rosette nitrogen content from 7.0% to 6.4%, evidence that leaf nitrogen was being preferentially apportioned to the photosynthetic apparatus.









TABLE 34







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in BBX26 overexpression lines. Effects and relative effect


size are displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), leaf chlorophyll content and rosette nitrogen concentration


(rosette [N]). Effects on photosynthetic capacity (P. Cap) are also described and where known, the biochemical basis for


the effect is described as either due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).














Polypeptide





Leaf



Sequence/
SEQ




Chlorophyll
Rosette


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
P. Cap
content
[N]





BBX26/
410
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1486
Increased
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 1



(15%)
RuBP
(9%)
(6%)


BBX26/
410
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1486
Increased
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 2



(13%)

(24%)
(5%)


BBX26/
410
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1486
Increased
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 3



(17%)
RuBP
(20%)
(4%)


BBX26/
410
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1486
Increased
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 4



(15%)
RuBP
(23%)
(2%)


BBX26/
410
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G1486
Increased
Increased
Decreased
Decreased


Line 5



(10%)
RuBP
(10%)
(2%)









The results presented in Table 34 were determined after screening six independent transgenic events. Lines 1 and 2 were screened twice and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the two screening runs. For both lines the direction of the effect was the same in both runs. Lines 3, 4, 5 and 6 were screened once.


Table 35 details indicators of photosynthetic resource use efficiency observed in Arabidopsis plants overexpressing PMT24 in experiments conducted to date.


The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is a key determinant of the efficiency with which photosynthesis operates relative to resources required for plant growth. The biochemical capacity for photosynthesis is the product of plant resource investment in numerous pigments and proteins required to absorb light and couple it to the enzymatic reduction of carbon in the air, to sugars in the chloroplast. This capacity for photosynthesis sets limits upon the rate of photosynthesis that can be achieved by a leaf, and ultimately the yield potential of crops. Consequently, increasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity is considered a pathway to improving crop yield across broad acres. Table 35 describes increased photosynthesis in five out of seven independent lines overexpressing PMT24. When averaged for these seven PMT24 overexpression lines, photosynthetic rate was increased by 18%. Table 35 also details how for five out of seven lines, the increase in photosynthetic rate is linked to an increase in capacity for photosynthesis. Of the numerous steps that can limit photosynthesis, the capacity to regenerate RuBP in the Calvin cycle is a key constraint. FIG. 34 displays evidence of an increase in the capacity to regenerate RuBP in four of the five PMT24 overexpression lines run through a focused secondary screen (Long & Bernacchi 2003 already cited above, describe the basis for RuBP regeneration capacity). This increase in photosynthetic capacity was achieved without any increase in leaf chlorophyll content, which was increased by less than 1% when averaged across all seven lines. These findings suggest that PMT24 overexpression changes resource investment in different components of the photosynthetic apparatus and, because all the PMT24 lines screened were grown in the same environment as the control lines, that the increase in photosynthetic capacity and photosynthetic rate observed has been achieved through an increase in photosynthetic resource-use efficiency in these lines.









TABLE 35







Components of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in PMT24 overexpression lines. Effects and


relative effect size are displayed for leaf photosynthetic rate (photosynthesis), photosynthetic capacity


and leaf chlorophyll content. Where know the biochemical basis for increase in photosynthetic capacity is


described as either due to effects on Rubisco activity (Rubisco) or the capacity to regenerate RuBP (RuBP).













Polypeptide





Leaf


Sequence/
SEQ



Photosynthetic
chlorophyll


Line
ID NO:
Driver
Target
Photosynthesis
capacity
content





PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 1



(46%)

(3%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Increased
No effect
Increased


Line 2



(26%)

(2%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Increased
Increased
Increased


Line 3



(34%)
RuBP
(2%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
No effect
Increased
Increased


Line 4



(<1%)
RuBP
(4%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Decreased
Increased
No effect


Line 5



(6%)
RuBP
(<1%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Increased
Increased
Decreased


Line 6



(14%)
RuBP
(4%)


PMT24/
444
35S::m35S::oEnh:LexA:GAL4_opLexA::GFP
opLexA::G837
Increased
No effect
Increased


Line 7



(11%)

(3%)









The results presented in Table 35 were determined after screening seven independent transgenic events. Line 3 was screened twice and the effect size reported for a given parameter is the mean of the two screening runs. All other lines were screened once.


The present disclosure thus describes how the transformation of plants, which may include monocots and/or dicots, with an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide can confer to the transformed plants greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than the level of photosynthetic resource use efficiency exhibited by control plants. In one embodiment, expression of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 is driven by a constitutive promoter. In another embodiment, expression of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 is driven by a promoter with enhanced activity in a tissue capable of photosynthesis (also referred to herein as a “photosynthetic promoter” or a “photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter”) such as a leaf tissue or other green tissue. Examples of photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoters include for example, an RBCS3 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862), an RBCS4 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 863) or others such as the At4g01060 (also referred to as “G682”) promoter (SEQ ID NO: 864), the latter regulating expression in guard cells, or promoters listed in Table 4. Other photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoters have been taught by Bassett et al., 2007. BMC Biotechnol. 7: 47, specifically incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Other photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoters of interest include those from the maize aldolase gene FDA (U.S. patent publication no. 20040216189, specifically incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), and the aldolase and pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) (Taniguchi et al., 2000. Plant Cell Physiol. 41:42-48, specifically incorporated herein by reference in its entirety). Other tissue enhanced promoters or inducible promoters are also envisioned that may be used to regulate expression of the disclosed clade member polypeptides and improve photosynthetic resource use efficiency in a variety of plants.


Example VI
Utilities of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 Clade Sequences for Improving Photosynthetic Resource Use Efficiency, Yield or Biomass

By expressing the present polynucleotide sequences in a commercially valuable plant, the plant's phenotype may be altered to one with improved traits related to photosynthetic resource use efficiency or yield. The sequences may be introduced into the commercially valuable plant, by, for example, introducing the polynucleotide in an expression vector or cassette to produce a transgenic plant, or by crossing a target plant with a second plant that comprises said polynucleotide. The transgenic or target plant may be any valuable species of interest, including but not limited to a crop or model plant such as a wheat, Setaria, corn (maize), rice, barley, rye, millet, sorghum, turfgrass, sugarcane, miscane, turfgrass, Miscanthus, switchgrass, soybean, cotton, rape, oilseed rape including canola, Eucalyptus, or poplar plant. The present polynucleotide sequences encode an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide sequence and the ectopic expression or overexpression in the transgenic or target plant of any of said polypeptides, for example, a polypeptide comprising any of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444, or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241, or at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to any of SEQ ID NOs: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, or 444, and/or SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1 to 241, and/or at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% amino acid identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483, 490, 510, 538, 566, 588, 599, 608, 623, 629, 659, 686, 702, 721, 741, 760, 769, 786, 813, and/or at least 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% m 96% m 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to any of consensus sequences SEQ ID NOs: 842-861, can confer improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency or yield in the plant. For plants for which biomass is the product of interest, increasing the expression level of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade of polypeptide sequences may increase yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant of the plants. Thus, it is thus expected that these sequences will improve yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant in non-Arabidopsis plants relative to control plants. This yield improvement may result in yield increases of at least 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, 14%, 15%, 16%, 17%, 18%, 19%, 20%, 25%, 30% or greater yield relative to the yield that may be obtained with control plants.


It is expected that the same methods may be applied to identify other useful and valuable sequences that are functionally-related and/or closely-related to the listed sequences or domains provided in the instant Tables, and the sequences may be derived from diverse species. Because of morphological, physiological and photosynthetic resource use efficiency similarities that may occur among closely-related sequences, the disclosed clade sequences are expected to increase yield, light use efficiency, photosynthetic capacity, photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, vigor, and/or biomass as compared to a control plant to a variety of crop plants, ornamental plants, and woody plants used in the food, ornamental, paper, pulp, lumber or other industries.


Example VII
Expression and Analysis of Increased Yield or Photosynthetic Resource Use Efficiency in Non-Arabidopsis or Crop Species

Northern blot analysis, RT-PCR or microarray analysis of the regenerated, transformed plants may be used to show expression of a polypeptide or the instant description and related genes that are capable of inducing improved photosynthetic resource use efficiency, and/or larger size.


After a eudicot plant, monocot plant or plant cell has been transformed (and the latter plant host cell regenerated into a plant) and shown to have or produce increased yield, increased light use efficiency, increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic resource use efficiency, greater vigor, and/or greater biomass as compared to a control plant relative to a control plant, the transformed monocot plant may be crossed with itself or a plant from the same line, a non-transformed or wild-type monocot plant, or another transformed monocot plant from a different transgenic line of plants.


The function of one or more specific polypeptides of the instant description has been analyzed and may be further characterized and incorporated into crop plants. The ectopic overexpression of one or more of the disclosed clade polypeptide sequences may be regulated using constitutive, inducible, or tissue-enhanced regulatory elements. Genes that have been examined have been shown to modify plant traits including increasing yield and/or photosynthetic resource use efficiency. It is expected that newly discovered polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences closely related, as determined by the disclosed hybridization or identity analyses, to polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences found in the Sequence Listing can also confer alteration of traits in a similar manner to the sequences found in the Sequence Listing, when transformed into any of a considerable variety of plants of different species, and including dicots and monocots. The polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences derived from monocots (e.g., the rice sequences) may be used to transform both monocot and dicot plants, and those derived from dicots (e.g., the Arabidopsis and soy genes) may be used to transform either group, although it is expected that some of these sequences will function best if the gene is transformed into a plant from the same group as that from which the sequence is derived.


As an example of a first step to determine photosynthetic resource use efficiency, seeds of these transgenic plants may be grown as described above or methods known in the art.


Closely-related homologs of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 derived from various diverse plant species may be overexpressed in plants and have the same functions of conferring increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency. It is thus expected that structurally similar orthologs of the disclosed polypeptide clades, including SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241, orthologs that comprise any of consensus sequences SEQ ID NOs: 842-861, can confer increased yield, increased light use efficiency, increased photosynthetic capacity, increased photosynthetic rate, increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency, greater vigor, greater biomass, and/or size, relative to control plants. As at least one sequence of the instant description has increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in Arabidopsis, it is expected that the sequences provided in the Sequence Listing, or polypeptide sequences comprising one of or any of the conserved domains provided in the instant Tables, will increase the photosynthetic resource use efficiency and/or yield of transgenic plants including transgenic non-Arabidopsis (plant species other than Arabidopsis species) crop or other commercially important plant species, including, but not limited to, non-Arabidopsis plants and plant species such as monocots and dicots, wheat, Setaria, corn (maize), teosinte (Zea species which is related to maize), rice, barley, rye, millet, sorghum, turfgrass, sugarcane, miscane, turfgrass, Miscanthus, switchgrass, soybean, cotton, rape, oilseed rape including canola, tobacco, tomato, tomatillo, potato, sunflower, alfalfa, clover, banana, blackberry, blueberry, strawberry, raspberry, cantaloupe, carrot, cauliflower, coffee, cucumber, eggplant, grapes, honeydew, lettuce, mango, melon, onion, papaya, peas, peppers, pineapple, pumpkin, spinach, squash, sweet corn, watermelon, rosaceous fruits including apple, peach, pear, cherry and plum, and brassicas including broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, and kohlrabi, currant, avocado, citrus fruits including oranges, lemons, grapefruit and tangerines, artichoke, cherries, endive, leek, roots such as arrowroot, beet, cassava, turnip, radish, yam, and sweet potato, beans, woody species including pine, poplar, Eucalyptus, mint or other labiates, nuts such as walnut and peanut. Within each of these species the closely-related homologs of AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 may be overexpressed or ectopically expressed in different varieties, cultivars, or germplasm.


The instantly disclosed transgenic plants comprising the disclosed recombinant polynucleotides can be enhanced with other polynucleotides, resulting in a plant or plants with “stacked” or jointly introduced traits, for example, the traits of increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency and improved yield combined with an enhanced trait resulting from expression of a polynucleotide that confers herbicide, insect or and/or pest resistance in a single plant or in two or more parental lines. The disclosed polynucleotides may thus be stacked with a nucleic acid sequence providing other useful or valuable traits such as a nucleic acid sequence from Bacillus thuringensis that confers resistance to hemiopteran, homopteran, lepidopteran, coliopteran or other insects or pests.


Thus, the disclosed sequences and closely related, functionally related sequences may be identified that, when ectopically expressed or overexpressed in plants, confer one or more characteristics that lead to greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency. These characteristics include, but are not limited to, the embodiments listed below.


1. A dicot or monocot transgenic plant that has greater or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiencyrelative to a control plant;


wherein the transgenic plant comprises an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter selected from the group consisting of:


a constitutive promoter, a non-constitutive promoter, an inducible promoter, a tissue-enhanced promoter, and a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter;


wherein the promoter regulates expression of a polypeptide having a percentage identity to an amino acid sequence comprising an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide in a photosynthetic or green tissue of the transgenic plant;


wherein the percentage identity is at least:

    • 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to the entire length of any of SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1-241; and/or
    • at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483 to 841; and/or
    • at least 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to a consensus sequence of any of SEQ ID NO: 842-861; and/or
    • the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide hybridizes with any of SEQ ID NO: 1, 41, 85, 107, 125, 155, 191, 245, 277, 317, 355, 387, 409, or 443 under stringent hybridization conditions followed by one, two, or more wash steps of 6×SSC and 65° C. for ten to thirty minutes per step;


wherein expression of the polypeptide under the regulatory control of the promoter confers greater or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency in the transgenic plant relative to the control plant;


wherein the control plant does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide; and/or


2. The transgenic plant of embodiment 1, wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter is an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter, an At4g01060 promoter, an Os02g09720 promoter, an Os05g34510 promoter, an Os11g08230 promoter, an Os01g64390 promoter, an Os06g15760 promoter, an Os12g37560 promoter, an Os03g17420 promoter, an Os04g51000 promoter, an Os01g01960 promoter, an Os05g04990 promoter, an Os02g44970 promoter, an Os01g25530 promoter, an Os03g30650 promoter, an Os01g64910 promoter, an Os07g26810 promoter, an Os07g26820 promoter, an Os09g11220 promoter, an Os04g21800 promoter, an Os10g23840 promoter, an Os08g13850 promoter, an Os12g42980 promoter, an Os03g29280 promoter, an Os03g20650 promoter, or an Os06g43920 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862-888, respectively), or a functional variant thereof, or a functional fragment thereof, or a promoter sequence that is at least 80% identical to SEQ ID NO: 862-888; and/or


3. The transgenic plant of embodiments 1 or 2, wherein:


the recombinant polynucleotide encodes the polypeptide which comprises any of SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1-241; and/or


any of SEQ ID NOs: 483, 490, 510, 538, 566, 588, 599, 608, 623, 629, 659, 686, 702, 721, 741, 760, 769, 786, 813; and/or


any of SEQ ID NO: 842-861; and/or


4. The transgenic plant of any of embodiments 1 to 3, wherein the polypeptide is encoded by


(a) the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide, or


(b) a second exogenous recombinant polynucleotide and expression of the polypeptide is regulated by a trans-regulatory element; and/or


5. The transgenic plant of any of embodiments 1 to 4, wherein a plurality of the transgenic plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density; and/or


6. The transgenic plant of any of embodiments 1 to 5, wherein the transgenic plant produces a greater yield than the control plant, including, but not limited to, a greater yield of: vegetative biomass, plant parts, whole plants, shoot vegetative organs/structures (for example, leaves, stems and tubers), roots, flowers and floral organs/structures (for example, bracts, sepals, petals, stamens, carpels, anthers and ovules), seed (including embryo, endosperm, and seed coat) and fruit (the mature ovary), plant tissue (for example, vascular tissue, ground tissue, pulped, pureed, ground-up, macerated or broken-up tissue, and the like) and cells (for example, guard cells, egg cells, and the like); and/or


7. The transgenic plant of any of embodiments 1 to 6, wherein the transgenic plant is selected from the group consisting of a corn, wheat, rice, Setaria, Miscanthus, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum, turfgrass, soy, cotton, canola, rapeseed, Crambe, Camelina, sugar beet, alfalfa, tomato, Eucalyptus, poplar, willow, pine, birch and a woody plant; and/or


8. The transgenic plant of any of embodiments 1 to 7, wherein the transgenic plant is morphologically similar to the control plant at one or more stages of growth, and/or developmentally similar to the control plant.


9. A method for increasing photosynthetic resource use efficiencyin a dicot or monocot plant, the method comprising:


(a) providing one or more dicot or monocot plants that comprise an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter selected from the group consisting of:


a constitutive promoter, a non-constitutive promoter, an inducible promoter, a tissue-enhanced promoter, and a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter;


wherein the promoter regulates expression of a polypeptide having a percentage identity to an amino acid sequence comprising an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide in a photosynthetic or green tissue of the dicot or monocot plant;


wherein the percentage identity is at least:

    • 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to the entire length of any of SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1-241; and/or
    • at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483 to 841; and/or
    • at least 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to a consensus sequence of any of SEQ ID NO: 842-861; and/or


the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide hybridizes with any of SEQ ID NO: 1, 41, 85, 107, 125, 155, 191, 245, 277, 317, 355, 387, 409, or 443 under stringent hybridization conditions followed by one, two, or more wash steps of 6×SSC and 65° C. for ten to thirty minutes per step;


wherein expression of the polypeptide in the one or more dicot or monocot plants confers greater or increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to a control plant that does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide; and


(b) growing the one or more dicot or monocot plants; and/or


10. The method of embodiment 9, wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter is an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter, an At4g01060 promoter, an Os02g09720 promoter, an Os05g34510 promoter, an Os11g08230 promoter, an Os01g64390 promoter, an Os06g15760 promoter, an Os12g37560 promoter, an Os03g17420 promoter, an Os04g51000 promoter, an Os01g01960 promoter, an Os05g04990 promoter, an Os02g44970 promoter, an Os01g25530 promoter, an Os03g30650 promoter, an Os01g64910 promoter, an Os07g26810 promoter, an Os07g26820 promoter, an Os09g11220 promoter, an Os04g21800 promoter, an Os10g23840 promoter, an Os08g13850 promoter, an Os12g42980 promoter, an Os03g29280 promoter, an Os03g20650 promoter, or an Os06g43920 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862-888, respectively), or a functional variant thereof, or a functional fragment thereof, or a promoter sequence that is at least 80% identical to SEQ ID NO: 862-888; and/or


11. The method of embodiments 9 or 10, wherein an expression cassette comprising the recombinant polynucleotide is introduced into a target plant to produce the dicot or monocot plant comprising the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide; and/or


12. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 11, wherein the polypeptide is encoded by

    • (a) the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide, or
    • (b) a second exogenous recombinant polynucleotide and expression of the polypeptide is regulated by a trans-regulatory element; and/or


      13. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 12, wherein the dicot or monocot plant is selected for having the increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to the control plant; and/or


      14. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 13, wherein the dicot or monocot plant produces a greater yield relative to the control plant; and/or


      15. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 14, wherein the dicot or monocot plant is selected for having the greater yield relative to the control plant; and/or


      16. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 15, wherein a plurality of the dicot or monocot plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density; and/or


      17. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 16, wherein the dicot or monocot plant is selected from the group consisting of a corn, wheat, rice, Setaria, Miscanthus, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum, turfgrass, soy, cotton, canola, rapeseed, Crambe, Camelina, sugar beet, alfalfa, tomato, Eucalyptus, poplar, willow, pine, birch and a woody plant; and/or


      18. The method of any of embodiments 9 to 17, the method steps further including:


crossing the dicot or monocot plant with itself, a second plant from the same line as the dicot or monocot plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed.


19. A method for producing and selecting a dicot or monocot crop plant with greater yield or greater photosynthetic resource use efficiencythan a control plant, the method comprising:


(a) providing one or more dicot or monocot transgenic plants that comprise an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter selected from the group consisting of:

    • a constitutive promoter, a non-constitutive promoter, an inducible promoter, a tissue-enhanced promoter, and a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter;
    • wherein the promoter regulates expression of a polypeptide having a percentage identity to an amino acid sequence comprising an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide in a photosynthetic or green tissue of the dicot or monocot transgenic plant;
    • wherein the percentage identity is:
    • at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to the entire length of any of SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1-241; and/or
    • at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483 to 841; and/or
    • at least 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to a consensus sequence of any of SEQ ID NO: 842-861; and/or
    • the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide hybridizes with any of SEQ ID NO: 1, 41, 85, 107, 125, 155, 191, 245, 277, 317, 355, 387, 409, or 443 under stringent hybridization conditions followed by one, two, or more wash steps of 6×SSC and 65° C. for ten to thirty minutes per step;
      • wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter does not regulate protein expression in a constitutive manner;


(b) growing a plurality of the dicot or monocot transgenic plants; and


(c) selecting a dicot or monocot transgenic plant that:

    • has greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than the control plant, wherein the control plant does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide; and/or
    • comprises the recombinant polynucleotide;
    • wherein expression of the polypeptide in the selected dicot or monocot transgenic plant confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency or the greater yield relative to the control plant;


      and/or


      20. The method of embodiment 19, the method steps further including:
    • (d) crossing the selected dicot or monocot transgenic plant with itself, a second plant from the same line as the selected transgenic plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed; and/or


      21. The method of embodiment 19 or 20, wherein the dicot or monocot transgenic plant is selected for having the increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to the control plant; and/or


      22. The method of any of embodiments 19 to 21, wherein a plurality of the selected dicot or monocot transgenic plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density; and/or


      23. The method of any of embodiments 19 to 22, wherein the selected dicot or monocot transgenic plant has an altered trait that confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency.


      24. A method for producing a dicot or monocot crop plant with greater photosynthetic resource use efficiencythan a control plant, the method comprising:
    • (a) providing a dicot or monocot transgenic plant that comprises an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide that comprises a promoter selected from the group consisting of:
      • a constitutive promoter, a non-constitutive promoter, an inducible promoter, a tissue-enhanced promoter, or a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter;
      • wherein the promoter regulates expression of a polypeptide comprising SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, or 444 in a photosynthetic or green tissue of the transgenic plant to a level that is effective in conferring greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency in the transgenic plant relative to the control plant; and
    • (b) measuring an altered trait that confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency, wherein expression of the polypeptide in the selected dicot or monocot transgenic plant confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency of the transgenic plant relative to the control plant, thereby producing the crop plant with greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than the control plant; and/or


      25. The method of embodiment 24, wherein the transgenic dicot or monocot plant is selected for having the increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to the control plant.


      26. A method for producing a monocot plant with increased grain yield, said method including:
    • (a) providing a monocot plant cell or plant tissue with stably integrated, exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a promoter (for example, a constitutive, a non-constitutive, an inducible, a tissue-enhanced, or a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter) that is functional in plant cells and that is operably linked to an exogenous or an endogenous nucleic acid sequence that encodes a polypeptide that has a percentage identity to an amino acid sequence comprising an AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PIL1, PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide, wherein the percentage identity is:
      • at least 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to the entire length of any of SEQ ID NOs: 2n, where n=1-241; and/or
      • at least 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identity to a domain of any of SEQ ID NOs: 483 to 841; and/or
      • at least 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95% or 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or about 100% identical to a consensus sequence of any of SEQ ID NO: 842-861; and/or
      • the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide hybridizes with any of SEQ ID NO: 1, 41, 85, 107, 125, 155, 191, 245, 277, 317, 355, 387, 409, or 443 under stringent hybridization conditions followed by one, two, or more wash steps of 6×SSC and 65° C. for ten to thirty minutes per step;
    • (b) generating a monocot plant from the plant cell or the plant tissue, wherein the monocot plant comprises the exogenous recombinant polynucleotide, wherein the polypeptide is expressed in a photosynthetic or green tissue of the monocot plant to a level that is effective in conferring greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency† in the monocot plant relative to a control plant that does not contain the recombinant polynucleotide;
    • (c) growing the monocot plant; and
    • (d) measuring an increase in photosynthetic resource use efficiency of at least 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, 14%, 15%, 16%, 17%, 18%, 19%, 20%, 21%, 22%, 23%, 24%, 25%, 26%, 2%, 28%, 29%, or 30% relative to the control plant, or an increase in grain yield of at least 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, 14%, 15%, 16%, 17%, 18%, 19%, 20%, 21%, 22%, 23%, 24%, 25%, 26%, 2%, 28%, 29%, or 30% or at least 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 bushels per acre; thereby producing the monocot plant with increased grain yield relative to the control plant; and/or


      27. The method of embodiment 26, wherein the AtMYB27, RBP45A, TCP6, PILL PCL1, GTL1, DREB2H, ERF087, NF-YC6, BBX18, bHLH60, BBX26, bHLH121, or PMT24 clade polypeptide comprises a consensus sequence of one or more of any of SEQ ID NOs: 842-861; and/or


      28. A transgenic monocot plant produced by the method of embodiment 26; and/or


      29. The transgenic monocot plant of embodiment 28, wherein transgenic monocot plant is a corn, wheat, rice, Miscanthus, Setaria, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum or turfgrass plant; and/or


      30. The method of embodiment 26, wherein the promoter is an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter, an At4g01060 promoter, an Os02g09720 promoter, an Os05g34510 promoter, an Os11g08230 promoter, an Os01g64390 promoter, an Os06g15760 promoter, an Os12g37560 promoter, an Os03g17420 promoter, an Os04g51000 promoter, an Os01g01960 promoter, an Os05g04990 promoter, an Os02g44970 promoter, an Os01g25530 promoter, an Os03g30650 promoter, an Os01g64910 promoter, an Os07g26810 promoter, an Os07g26820 promoter, an Os09g11220 promoter, an Os04g21800 promoter, an Os10g23840 promoter, an Os08g13850 promoter, an Os12g42980 promoter, an Os03g29280 promoter, an Os03g20650 promoter, or an Os06g43920 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862-888, respectively) or a Cauliflower Mosaic 35S promoter, or a functional variant thereof, or a functional fragment thereof, or a promoter sequence that is at least 80% identical to SEQ ID NO: 862-888; and/or


      31. The method of embodiment 28, wherein the clade polypeptide comprises any of SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, or 444.


      † In the above embodiments 1, 9, 19, 24, and 26, greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency may be characterized by or measured as, but is not limited to, any one or more of following measurements or characteristics relative to a control plant. The measured or altered trait may be selected from the group consisting of:
    • (a) increased photosynthetic capacity, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, or 40% when compared to the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of a control leaf at the same leaf-internal CO2 concentration. Optionally, measurements are made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or
    • (b) increased photosynthetic rate, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 19%, 20%, 22%, 23%, 25%, 30%, 32%, 35%, or 40%. Optionally, measurements are made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity known to be saturating for photosynthesis; and/or
    • (c) a decrease in the chlorophyll content of the leaf of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, or 40%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity; and/or
    • (d) a decrease in the percentage of the leaf dry weight that is nitrogen of at least 0.5%, 1.0%, 1.5%, 2.0%, 2.5%, 3.0%, 3.5%, or 4.0% observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity or increase in dry weight; and/or
    • (e) increased transpiration efficiency, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis relative to water loss via transpiration from the leaf, of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, or 40%; optionally, measurements are made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or
    • (f) an increase in the resistance to water vapor diffusion out of the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as a decrease in stomatal conductance to H2O loss from the leaf of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, or 40%; optionally, measurements were are after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m-2 s-1; and/or
    • (g) a decrease in the resistance to carbon dioxide diffusion into the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as an increase in stomatal conductance of at least 5%, 10%, 13%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 27%, 30%, 35%, 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, or 68%; optionally, measurements were are after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m-2 s-1; and/or
    • (h) a decrease in non-photochemical quenching of at least 2%, at least 3%, at least 4%, at least 5%, at least 6%, at least 7%, at least 8%, at least 9%, or at least 10%, for leaf measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or
    • (i) a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C found in either all the dried above-ground biomass, or specific components of the above-ground biomass, e.g., leaves or reproductive structures, of at least 0.5‰(0.5 per mille), or at least 1.0‰, 1.5‰, 2.0‰, 2.5‰, 3.0‰, 3.5‰, or 4.0‰ measured as a decrease in the ratio of 12C to 13C relative to the controls with both ratio being expressed relative to the same standard; and/or
    • (j) an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material of at least 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 23%, 25%, 30%, 32%, 35%, 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, or 75%.


All publications and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.


The present invention is not limited by the specific embodiments described herein. The invention now being fully described, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many changes and modifications can be made thereto without departing from the spirit or scope of the appended claims. Modifications that become apparent from the foregoing description and accompanying figures fall within the scope of the claims.

Claims
  • 1. A transgenic plant having greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than a control plant; wherein the transgenic plant comprises an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter and a nucleic acid sequence that encodes a polypeptide comprising SEQ ID NOs: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444, or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241;wherein the promoter regulates expression of the polypeptide in a photosynthetic tissue to a level that is effective in conferring greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency in the transgenic plant relative to the control plant;wherein the control plant does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide;wherein the promoter does not regulate protein expression in a constitutive manner; andwherein expression of the polypeptide under the regulatory control of the promoter confers greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency in the transgenic plant relative to the control plant.
  • 2. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein the promoter is a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter.
  • 3. The transgenic plant of claim 2, wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter is an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter, an At4g01060 promoter, an Os02g09720 promoter, an Os05g34510 promoter, an Os11g08230 promoter, an Os01g64390 promoter, an Os06g15760 promoter, an Os12g37560 promoter, an Os03g17420 promoter, an Os04g51000 promoter, an Os01g01960 promoter, an Os05g04990 promoter, an Os02g44970 promoter, an Os01g25530 promoter, an Os03g30650 promoter, an Os01g64910 promoter, an Os07g26810 promoter, an Os07g26820 promoter, an Os09g11220 promoter, an Os04g21800 promoter, an Os10g23840 promoter, an Os08g13850 promoter, an Os12g42980 promoter, an Os03g29280 promoter, an Os03g20650 promoter, or an Os06g43920 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862-888, respectively).
  • 4. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein: the recombinant polynucleotide encodes the polypeptide comprising SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444, or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241; orthe polypeptide is encoded by a second polynucleotide and expression of the polypeptide is regulated by a trans-regulatory element.
  • 5. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein the transgenic plant has an altered trait, relative to the control plant, that confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency, wherein the altered trait is selected from the group consisting of: (a) increased photosynthetic capacity, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10% when compared to the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of a control leaf at the same leaf-internal CO2 concentration, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(b) increased photosynthetic rate, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(c) a decrease in the chlorophyll content of the leaf of at least 10%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity; and/or(d) a decrease in the percentage of the leaf dry weight that is nitrogen of at least 0.5%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity or increase in dry weight; and/or(e) increased transpiration efficiency, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis relative to water loss via transpiration from the leaf, of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(f) an increase in the resistance to water vapor diffusion out of the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as a decrease in stomatal conductance to H2O loss from the leaf of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(g) a decrease in the resistance to carbon dioxide diffusion into the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as an increase in stomatal conductance of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(h) a decrease in the relative limitation that non-photochemical quenching exerts on the operation of PSII measured as a decrease in leaf non-photochemical quenching of at least 2% after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(i) a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C found in either all the dried above-ground biomass, or specific components of the above-ground biomass, e.g. leaves or reproductive structures, of at least 0.5‰(0.5 per mille), measured as a decrease in the ratio of 12C to 13C relative to the controls with both ratio being expressed relative to the same standard; and/or(j) an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material of at least 5%.
  • 6. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein a plurality of the transgenic plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density.
  • 7. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein the transgenic plant produces a greater yield than the control plant.
  • 8. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein the transgenic plant is selected from the group consisting of a dicot plant, monocot plant, corn, wheat, rice, Setaria, Miscanthus, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum, turfgrass, soy, cotton, canola, rapeseed, Crambe, Camelina, sugar beet, alfalfa, tomato, Eucalyptus, poplar, willow, pine, birch and a woody plant.
  • 9. A method for increasing photosynthetic resource use efficiency in a plant, the method comprising: (a) providing one or more transgenic plants that comprise an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide comprising a photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter and a nucleic acid sequence that encodes a polypeptide comprising SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444, or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241; wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter regulates expression of the polypeptide in a non-constitutive manner; and(b) growing the one or more transgenic plants; wherein expression of the polypeptide in the one or more transgenic plants confers increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to a control plant that does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide.
  • 10. The method of claim 9, wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter is an RBCS3 promoter, an RBCS4 promoter, an At4g01060 promoter, an Os02g09720 promoter, an Os05g34510 promoter, an Os11g08230 promoter, an Os01g64390 promoter, an Os06g15760 promoter, an Os12g37560 promoter, an Os03g17420 promoter, an Os04g51000 promoter, an Os01g01960 promoter, an Os05g04990 promoter, an Os02g44970 promoter, an Os01g25530 promoter, an Os03g30650 promoter, an Os01g64910 promoter, an Os07g26810 promoter, an Os07g26820 promoter, an Os09g11220 promoter, an Os04g21800 promoter, an Os10g23840 promoter, an Os08g13850 promoter, an Os12g42980 promoter, an Os03g29280 promoter, an Os03g20650 promoter, or an Os06g43920 promoter (SEQ ID NO: 862-888, respectively).
  • 11. The method of claim 9, wherein an expression cassette comprising the recombinant polynucleotide is introduced into a target plant to produce the transgenic plant.
  • 12. The method of claim 9, wherein the transgenic plant has an altered trait, relative to the control plant, that confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency, wherein the altered trait is selected from the group consisting of: (a) increased photosynthetic capacity, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10% when compared to the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of a control leaf at the same leaf-internal CO2 concentration, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(b) increased photosynthetic rate, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(c) a decrease in the chlorophyll content of the leaf of at least 10%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity; and/or(d) a decrease in the percentage of the leaf dry weight that is nitrogen of at least 0.5%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity or increase in dry weight; and/or(e) increased transpiration efficiency, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis relative to water loss via transpiration from the leaf, of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(f) an increase in the resistance to water vapor diffusion out of the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as a decrease in stomatal conductance of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(g) a decrease in the resistance to carbon dioxide diffusion into the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as an increase in stomatal conductance of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(h) a decrease in the relative limitation that non-photochemical quenching exerts on the operation of PSII measured as a decrease in leaf non-photochemical quenching of at least 2% after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(i) a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C found in either all the dried above-ground biomass, or specific components of the above-ground biomass, e.g. leaves or reproductive structures, of at least 0.5‰(0.5 per mille), measured as a decrease in the ratio of 12C to 13C relative to the controls with both ratio being expressed relative to the same standard; and/or(j) an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material of at least 5% and/or(k) increased yield.
  • 13. The method of claim 9, wherein the transgenic plant is selected for having the increased photosynthetic resource use efficiency relative to the control plant.
  • 14. (canceled)
  • 15. The method of claim 9, wherein a plurality of the transgenic plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density.
  • 16. The method of claim 9, wherein the transgenic plant is selected from the group consisting of a dicot plant, monocot plant, corn, wheat, rice, Setaria, Miscanthus, switchgrass, ryegrass, sugarcane, miscane, barley, sorghum, turfgrass, soy, cotton, canola, rapeseed, Crambe, Camelina, sugar beet, alfalfa, tomato, Eucalyptus, poplar, willow, pine, birch and a woody plant.
  • 17. The method of claim 9, the method steps further including: crossing the target plant with itself, a second plant from the same line as the target plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed.
  • 18. A method for producing and selecting a crop plant with greater yield or photosynthetic resource use efficiency than a control plant, the method comprising: (a) providing one or more transgenic plants that comprise an exogenous recombinant polynucleotide that comprises photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter that regulates a polypeptide encoded by the recombinant polynucleotide, wherein the polypeptide comprises SEQ ID NO: 2, 42, 86, 108, 126, 156, 192, 246, 278, 318, 356, 388, 410, 444, or SEQ ID NOs: 2n where n=1 to 241, and wherein the photosynthetic tissue-enhanced promoter does not regulate protein expression in a constitutive manner;(b) growing a plurality of the transgenic plants; and(c) selecting a transgenic plant that: has greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency than the control plant, wherein the control plant does not comprise the recombinant polynucleotide; and/orcomprises the recombinant polynucleotide; wherein expression of the polypeptide in the selected transgenic plant confers the greater yield of the selected transgenic plant relative to the control plant.
  • 19. The method of claim 18, the method steps further including: (d) crossing the selected transgenic plant with itself, a second plant from the same line as the selected transgenic plant, a non-transgenic plant, a wild-type plant, or a transgenic plant from a different line of plants, to produce a transgenic seed.
  • 20. The method of claim 18, wherein a plurality of the selected transgenic plants have greater cumulative canopy photosynthesis than the canopy photosynthesis of the same number of the control plants grown under the same conditions and at the same density.
  • 21. The method of claim 18, wherein the selected transgenic plant has an altered trait, relative to the control plant, that confers the greater photosynthetic resource use efficiency, wherein the altered trait is selected from the group consisting of: (a) increased photosynthetic capacity, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10% when compared to the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of a control leaf at the same leaf-internal CO2 concentration, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(b) increased photosynthetic rate, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity that is saturating for photosynthesis; and/or(c) a decrease in the chlorophyll content of the leaf of at least 10%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity; and/or(d) a decrease in the percentage of the leaf dry weight that is nitrogen of at least 0.5%, observed in the absence of a decrease in photosynthetic capacity or increase in dry weight; and/or(e) increased transpiration efficiency, measured as an increase in the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis relative to water loss via transpiration from the leaf, of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(f) an increase in the resistance to water vapor diffusion out of the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as a decrease in stomatal conductance of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(g) a decrease in the resistance to carbon dioxide diffusion into the leaf that is exerted by the stomata, measured as an increase in stomatal conductance of at least 10%, with measurements made after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(h) a decrease in the relative limitation that non-photochemical quenching exerts on the operation of PSII measured as a decrease in leaf non-photochemical quenching of at least 2% after 40 minutes of acclimation to a light intensity of 700 μmol PAR m−2 s−1; and/or(i) a decrease in the ratio of the carbon isotope 12C to 13C found in either all the dried above-ground biomass, or specific components of the above-ground biomass, e.g. leaves or reproductive structures, of at least 0.5‰(0.5 per mille), measured as a decrease in the ratio of 12C to 13C relative to the controls with both ratio being expressed relative to the same standard; and/or(j) an increase in the total dry weight of above-ground plant material of at least 5%.
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/US2014/060267 10/13/2014 WO 00
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
61890613 Oct 2013 US